<p>I am a senior and I took the January SAT I. I listed the 11 colleges I applied to under Score Recipients, and I already paid the charge to add extra schools. Which will arrive faster: sending by regular reporting (through the Score Recipient section) or rush reporting after scores are released next Thursday? Do I have to pay for a separate rush report to all of the colleges so the scores will make it in time? If this question was already asked, please tell me where I can find the answer.</p>
<p>I called collegeboard with the same question, it is faster to use rush delivery after they are released online, because then, your scores are sent within 2-5 days of the request. If you wait for them to send to your list, they dont begin mailing until March 1.</p>
<p>I would suggest what I posted in this thread - <a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=295881%5B/url%5D">http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=295881</a></p>
<p>"What I am planning on doing is e-mailing my colleges the morning that I get the scores saying something like "I took the January SAT and received XXX Crtical Reading, XXX Writing, and XXX Math, which makes my new composite XXX Critical Reading, XXX Writing, and XXX Math. I will be sending the official score report as soon as possible."</p>
<p>Supposedly the schools don't even care about the score report during the admissions process and only need it later once you are accepted, as they assume that you are telling the truth, since if you lied about your scores and are admitted, they can and (depending on how much of a lie it was) will revoke your admissions to their school. That said, you should still send your scores to your schools."</p>
<p>There is no need to give College Board any unnecessary money.</p>
<p>Thanks so much to both of you for help! I think I'll go with your plan, mike--it seems like a great idea, and I won't have to worry about whether the reports will make it in time for review. </p>
<p>And I agree, i've already given College Board 100s of dollars, and they really don't deserve any more of my (parents') hard earned cash.</p>
<p>print out the page and ask ur counselor to fax them to the colleges</p>