<p>Physics - 690 and Maths 2c - 670.
Not great scores, and I haven't received any email from yale regarding missing documents.
So, is it OK if I don't send these scores at all?</p>
<p>Also, on my Yale Eli account there is a green tick mark below application status. Does it mean that my application is complete and I don't need to send theses subjects?
Please advice.</p>
<p>You are posting this at every Ivy forum. The answer is the same, if a school says subject tests are required then you need to submit them to be considered. Some schools may just require ACT, but you didn’t take ACT. </p>
<p>I’m sorry, but circumstances are different every where too.
For instance I received mails from a few school regarding missing documents while some say application is complete.
That’s the reason. I’m just verifying.</p>
<p>Rather than coming to an internet forum to ‘verify’ whether or not they need to be set, read the college website instead, the information is all there.</p>
<p>I’ll answer your question with what you SHOULD do for Yale.</p>
<p>Yale does not have score choice, so if you take the SAT, you must submit ALL SAT’s and ALL Subject Tests.</p>
<p>If you take the ACT, submit ALL ACT’s, but you don’t need to submit any subject tests. The ACT will suffice Yale’s testing requirements.</p>
<p>Some people think that Yale “prefers” SAT and Subject tests over ACT. While there’s really no way to prove any of this, I’ll tell you that I submitted just my ACT’s (34) and was accepted into Yale.</p>
<p>Just want to clarify, as this can make it sound like Y requires all testing as some other schools do. One can satisfy the Y testing requirements with EITHER all SAT/Subject tests OR all ACTs. Once this has been done, IF an applicant wants Y to see any of the other test, then they must send all testing.</p>
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<p>I haven’t seen any indication that Y (or any other school) prefers one test over the other. </p>
<p>For the second portion of my response concerning test preference, I should have been more clear. Based on past forum posts, I’ve generally seen many CC users think that SAT+Subject tests is “better” than the ACT, which is why I stated that. However, if you visit any of the websites for any of these schools, they state that they don’t prefer one over the other. Thus, this shouldn’t be a concern.</p>