<p>Hey. I was looking for a little advice about what to do with some my standardized test scores.</p>
<p>SAT:2100 (CR: 680, M: 720, W: 700)</p>
<p>SAT II: Bio M:800, USH:800, Japanese:720, Math II:680</p>
<p>I guess I have two questions. First, I know most colleges only require two SAT IIs, but one that I'm looking at requires 3. Should I retake the Math II (I'm 100% positive I can score much much better on it) or should I just leave it as it is with my language score? The other question is should I take the ACT? The SAT never agreed that well with me and I am looking at some upper level schools (Dartmouth, JH, Cornell, etc.). When I took the PLAN, my projected ACT was 31. Will that be better than my SAT score, or does it not make such a difference? Thanks for you help in advance!</p>
<p>If you’re positive that you can score better, I’d take it again. It really depends on what schools you’re applying to. Those three scores are good enough to get into pretty much any college.</p>
<p>If you take the ACT, you don’t have to submit your score. So, if you’re willing to put the time in to study for the ACT, there’s no harm in taking it.</p>
<p>I think most conversion charts score a 31 as slightly lower than a 2100.</p>
<p>My projected plan score was 30 and I ended up with a 34, so I’d say go for it. As for that 680 in Math II, I’d recommend retaking it if you’re interested in math, science, engineering, or the like. I don’t think you would need to retake that otherwise, though I’ll tell you honestly that I would. But then again, I always go overboard.</p>
<p>The PLAN test told me I’d score a 28-32 and I got a 34. PLAN underestimates, so you might as well take the ACT. I’m sitting on a 2130 SAT, FWIW, so you and I are in similar situations.</p>
<p>Also, you should definitely retake the Math SAT 2, especially since you’re confident in your abilities.</p>
<p>If you’re financially able, and you’re pretty sure you can raise it (as in no point if you’re gonna get a 10 point raise or something), I suggest you retake Math II. </p>
<p>Leave the language. It’s fine as it is; anything above a 700 is pretty good for languages, and I’ve never seen one person take Japanese so…</p>