<p>I will probably be registering for the June date, and am a little hesitant to solidify my selections. I plan to sign up for Math II, U.S. History, and Literature. I am fresh out of two years of honors precalculus classes, so I doubt the math SAT II will be a problem. U.S. History doesn't seem too difficult I just hit 11 of 16 cold turkey on the College Board's sample problems. Literature, however, seems like the ultimate variable for me. I have always been in advanced English classes (I will be finishing up AP Literature at the time of the test), but my ACT English score is a 32 and my Reading score is a 30. Will I still be able to score 650 or higher on the Literature SAT II? Thanks for the guidance.</p>
<p>I wouldn’t take the English ones… In the regular SAT you’re already demonstrating your reading/writing/mathematics skills, so I don’t think you really need to take the Literature one. But I could be wrong…</p>
<p>I’m taking Math II, US History, and French. And then in November I’m taking the French Listening and then Physics and that should be it for me</p>
<p>Don’t take three tests in one day. You’ll be completely exhausted by the third one, if not by midway through the second one, and you’ll do much more poorly on the third.</p>
<p>Take Math II and USH in June and then take another SAT II, if you need one, in the fall.</p>
<p>Just take Math 2 and USH in June. Take a science SAT II in October, so you can meet most colleges’ SAT II requirements.</p>
<p>if you can take 3 in one day, by all means do it. It’s best to take the tests when the material is fresh in your head.</p>
<p>Don’t take the English one. Of course someone can take three tests in one day, the SAT Reasoning test is far longer than three Subject tests put together.</p>