<p>Does Wharton super-score? If it does, it makes a 120 point difference for me!</p>
<p>I believe Penn does - but they require you to submit all your scores (no Score Choice option).</p>
<p>Thanks, so I am assuming that Wharton has similar SAT policies to the rest of Penn?</p>
<p>Yes. When you apply to Penn, I believe the policies are the same for all of the colleges including Wharton/undergrad.</p>
<p>Wait, so they require that you send ALL of your standardize test scores?<br>
I did awful on a SAT2 I took freshman year, do I have to send that to them?</p>
<p>they reccomend sending in ALL your scores…so i guess even the ones you did bad on? but i’m sure you retook them and did better so they’ll see your improvement and be happy! so nbd! :)</p>
<p>I think they only care about top 2 SAT II’s. I took 3 SAT II’s -800, 790, 660 (lol lit). I got in ok (no hooks).</p>
<p>do you think they place a lot of emphasis on sat 2’s? i haven’t got the best scores, unfortunately, but I don’t want that to hurt me?</p>
<p>I think those scores are just to compare your ability with people who take more common courses like AP/Honors/IB. </p>
<p>Other than that, I think they use it to measure grade inflation/deflation and the standards of your school. E.g. If a student gets 800 on all his SAT IIs but has a 3.2 GPA they will suspect grade deflation and vice versa. Also, if a Spanish teacher says that a student was “the best she ever had” (no pun intended) and the students get a 550 on the Spanish SAT II, then they will either assume that the teacher is talking out of her ass or that the school has pretty low standards.</p>
<p>that makes a lot of sense! Thank you!
But, okay, so for me, I got a 620 on my physics SAT 2 (eeep), but I got a 4 on the AP exam and an A in the class…so, I’d just be considered “average” in physics, right? not GREAT, but not BAD?</p>
<p>Possibly. I would re-take it if I were you. That is, if you think you can do much better the next time around, e.g. 700+.</p>