<p>It was probably a mistake. S just called to say he was fried after the second test (Math 2) and probably should have skipped the US history test that came after. </p>
<p>Question: Do you just send the subject scores you're happy with, or do the colleges see every SAT test score, every subject you've taken, whether you want to send that one or not?</p>
<p>Sorry to hear that - the same thing happened to my son, and I tell everyone who asks that it's not so good to take 3 on the same day. Colleges will see all the scores, but they say they count only the top 2 or 3 (depending on how many they require). But yeah, the College Board will not allow you to cherry pick the best scores to send to colleges.</p>
<p>I guess if the score is really disappointing, he can review/study and retake in the fall. Darn. He was okay with the idea of three in one sitting because then he wouldn't have to give up another Saturday to the SATs, but it was too much in one morning.</p>
<p>I did the same thing and i didn't think it was too too bad. I was really antsy towards the end of my third one but i wasn't burned out.</p>
<p>Then also, for my last one (literature) i didn't study which may have led to my having a better experience. I didn't have to work too hard to recall any facts - I just had to concentrate on a passage which for me isn't that hard of a task.</p>
<p>I guess taking 8 APs really paid off - 3 hours was nothing compared to 3+ hours of testing everyday during the second week of AP tests.</p>
<p>i took three today, too (lit, us history, and bio). like the poster above said, taking ap exams was A LOT more "brain-frying" than taking the subject tests. i'm not saying the 3-in-1 tests were easy, but it wasn't as bad as it thought it would be. (:</p>
<p>I did the same thing as OP's son, with Math II first, Physics second, and US history last. I was fine on the first two, but I was pretty tired for the USH, and I think it showed in my scores... (780, 800, and 720 respectively lol)</p>