<p>HI guys, I am a newbie here. I have some questions regarding to SAT score to ask you guys since I am sort of confused. I took the sat on June 4th; Of course I am intending to take it more than once. Collegeboard.com sent me an email saying that I still have a chance to send socres to four recipients before next Tuseday. However, I have not made up my mind yet because I am still doing the college research. My question is: what will collegeboard do to my score if I choose not to use it until my next test result is out (I will take Sat second time in September or October). Thanks for any prosepective replies. I really appreciate it .</p>
<p>They don’t do anything to your score. They won’t send it anywhere unless you tell them to. </p>
<p>When you take the SAT next time, you will again have the choice to send that score to 4 colleges for free, or to wait. If you wait, you need to pay about $10 for each school you send the score to. For that same $10, you can choose to send the scores from ALL of your tests or just the scores from ONE test date to a school. However, remember that some schools demand that you send ALL your scores.</p>
<p>College Board was telling you that you could send your scores to up to four colleges, universities or scholarship programs for free if you act before next Tuesday. Of course, the catch here is that you don’t know how you did yet. After next Tuesday, you can still send your scores to as many places as you can pay for.</p>
<p>When my daughter was applying to colleges, she didn’t use the free reports for SAT or ACT. She waited to see the scores, and then sent only the scores that she wanted to send.</p>
<p>This is just one more way in which the college admissions process privileges applicants whose parents can afford to pay.</p>
<p>Thank you for saving me a trip to guidance office. So basically collegeboard disadvantages students low income families.</p>
<p>I’m sure they don’t like to word it that way. I’m sure they prefer to say that they offer every student who registers for the SAT the chance to send his or her scores to four colleges, universities or scholarship programs at no charge. </p>
<p>But the simple fact is, if you want to know your scores before you send them, you’re going to have to wait until after the window to send your scores at no cost has closed.</p>
<p>I suppose another way to look at it is that the College Board is looking to squeeze every paid score report they can out of the families that can pay, but there’s an element of class-baiting in that, too.</p>
<p>To be fair, there are plenty of other entities that beat up on the poor way worse than College Board does. But still, this is one of many ways in which it’s just better to have money than not.</p>