<p>I live in Illinois, so I just took the SAT in October. Those scores are being sent to Stanford right after the test. First of all, are the SATII Subject Tests that I took in June going to be on that score report as well?</p>
<p>Also, I realized that Stanford would probably want my ACT Score Report too, so I just had ACT send them a score report today for SCEA. It says that it will take two to three weeks to get there, meaning between Nov. 1 and Nov. 8. Will Stanford care if the ACT report arrives sligthly late if they already have my SAT and SATII scores?</p>
<p>And, last question. Do I need to send my AP scores to Stanford as well? Is that even necessary?</p>
<p>
[quote]
First of all, are the SATII Subject Tests that I took in June going to be on that score report as well?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Yup. All SAT tests are on the report (well, up to 6 administrations for the SAT I).</p>
<p>
[quote]
Will Stanford care if the ACT report arrives sligthly late if they already have my SAT and SATII scores?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>No, that's fine.</p>
<p>
[quote]
And, last question. Do I need to send my AP scores to Stanford as well? Is that even necessary?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Not unless you want to. Most don't. If you feel that you're amazing (as in, you've taken a whole ton of exams and have gotten 5s on all or most of them), then it'd only benefit you to do so. But no, you don't need to.</p>
<p>If you send a score report, all scores, including the October one, will go. However, if you take the November or December SAT, you'd have to send your scores again for those test dates to show up.</p>
<p>On the AP scores, many schools put it on your transcript. Most colleges don't need the official collegeboard report till after you matriculate, but they do expect you to self-report your scores if your school doesn't. If you dont, they usually assume the scores are bad which is why you aren't self-reporting....</p>