so when penn considers all sat scores....

<p>No, I can’t substantiate the Writing section information – at least not beyond my firsthand account – and I’M NOT TRYING TO EITHER. </p>

<p>And no, I did not misspeak on superscoring thank you very much.</p>

<p>Curious that Penn never uses the word “superscore” themselves. So tell me, DOES a group of people screen the scores before handing them to the regular admissions staff? Reread what I wrote most recently before this post and then return.</p>

<p>Before we play anymore games, give me a definition of superscore Jersey and we’ll go from there.</p>

<p>Okay, just checked something.</p>

<p>NONE of the Ivies officially use the word superscore.</p>

<p>I’m going to check the Standardized Testing statement for Princeton, since everyone acknowledges that they superscore.</p>

<p>Princeton’s Website:</p>

<p>Score Choice
Applicants are welcome to use the score choice option for standardized test score submission. Princeton will consider the highest individual section results across all sittings of the SAT Reasoning and the highest composite score for the ACT with Writing, as well as the two highest SAT Subject Test scores. We encourage applicants to submit all official test scores as soon as they are available.</p>

<p>…</p>

<p>Yes, I know most already know this about score choice (blah blah blah). I am just emphasizing that Penn requires all the data whereas for a place like Princeton you can hide it. </p>

<p>Sure, I guess Penn “superscores”, but only by a very loose definition.</p>

<p>For the OP’s case none of this really matters and the thread itself will soon sink into oblivion anyway.</p>