Should I send all SAT subject test scores?

<p>I took the SAT twice and I'm definitely sending both of them. </p>

<p>However, these are my SAT subject tests and I'm not sure which ones to send for colleges that accept score choice. </p>

<p>Junior Year: Math II: 800, Chem: 800, U.S. History: 790
Sophomore Year: Math I: 740, Physics: 720
Freshman Year: Molecular Bio: 740 </p>

<p>If it helps, I'm majoring in engineering. I put chemical and bio engineering as my top two major choices but what I want to do in the future also involves mechanical engineering and engineering physics (I talk all about this in my supplemental essays). </p>

<p>So should I send everything? Or take out the low ones (physics, Math I, bio)...even though they are related to my major. </p>

<p>P.S. I'm definitely not sending Math I since I already have Math II it seems pointless.</p>

<p>Also, just to add, I’m applying to pretty selective schools (MIT, caltech, stanford, princeton, carnegie mellon, johns hopkins, etc.)</p>

<p>I’d send everything except math 1, it’s superfluous given the fact that you have an 800 math 2</p>

<p>Carnegie Mellon requires you to send all scores and that would include the math 1. Though Stanford requires all SAT scores you can choose which subject tests to send. The others accept score choice and allow you to send the scores you want to send but recommend sending all. Caltech requires math 2 and does not accept math 1. Stanford prefers math 2 if you submit a math. Your physics and bio score are likely a little low for Caltech the college with the highest test score ranges in the country. However, as long as you have the required two, math 2 and one science, it won’t hold lower scores of others against you and they are high enough that they might add benefit. Same applies to MIT. I would comply with Carnegie’s requirement and for others send everything but the math 1.</p>

<p>Your 720 in Physics is a little “soft” for top-tier Engineering schools. Are you going to take another stab at it?</p>

<p>okay so I just sent the scores.
For Cornell and Carnegie Mellon I sent everything.
For all others I sent everything except Math I.
Not taking Physics again.
I’m kind of scared they won’t get in time but hopefully they will…CB says 4 weeks but after reading several forums here on CC everyone said it takes about 2 weeks.</p>

<p>CB has said 4 weeks since the time before Bill Gates and Steve Jobs started high school and regular mail through the post office was the only means of sending anything. With electronic delivery, the issue is simply one of processing time for CB to get your order and then place your scores into an on-line account that the college has with CB and then how long thereafter it takes the college to go into its account and download scores. It should take no more than two weeks. </p>

<p>In additon, every college you have mentioned accepts scores that arrive after the application deadline date. They all also accept December test scores that have not even been released yet, and Princeton, Cornell, MIT, and Hopkins even take January SAT tests. Thus, if you ordered test scores sent today, they will arrive in time.</p>

<p>^ love your first sentence:D</p>