<p>
[QUOTE=spring162]
I didnt know schools listed your ACT on your transcript.
[/quote]
Some do, some don’t. And some colleges will accept scores from the transcript, but some require the official score reports.
[QUOTE=spring162]
I also thought you could choose which ACT you wanted unlike the SAT (until recently) which you had to send all.
[/quote]
You can choose which ACT sitting to send. That’s the good news. The bad news is, if you want to send results from multiple sittings, you have to pay for each one separately. Many colleges request that you report every result so they can get a more complete understanding of the student’s background. How you handle that is up to you, but the colleges typically mean it when they say they’ll count the student’s highest scores.</p>
<p>Quite a few colleges are relatively new to the ACT, so their policies may vary on superscoring (very common with SAT scores). If you know that a college superscores ACT results, your daughter can benefit by sending both sets of scores to that college.</p>
<p>Edit: In case you’re not yet familiar with superscoring, that means they cherry-pick the best scores from each sitting. Your daughter’s ACT 1&2 superscored: E 35, M 33, R 36, S 33, W 9</p>