<p>I got a 2000 sat (730 reading 670 math and 600 writing)
And a 30 Act (26 English 30 math 34 reading 31 science and a 25 combined English writing with an 8 on the writing)
Which should I send or are they about the same?</p>
<p>About the same.</p>
<p>[SAT</a> ACT Conversion Chart | Convert ACT scores to SAT scores](<a href=“http://www.studypoint.com/ed/sat-to-act-conversion/]SAT”>SAT to ACT Conversion Chart: Convert Your SAT Scores to ACT Scores)</p>
<p>Thanks, I thought so</p>
<p>I’ve been told by a friend that I should send my Act score over my SAT score because when reviewing SAT scores colleges look t each section and would see my poor writing score but on the ACT they would only look at the composite score of 30. Does this mean that I should send my ACT scores?</p>
<p>Oh and according to the conversion chart my SAT math and CR composite are 1400 which is like a 32 on the Act. ugh idk which to send</p>
<p>I recommend usually that people send all scores they have and not worry about how colleges read it. If the scores are close, colleges have additional decision points.</p>
<p>The only time to suppress one or the other is if they are vastly different - 30 ACT vs 2200 SAT or 2000 SAT vs 33 ACT.</p>
<p>Some schools like UT Dallas might give you merit money based on 1400 while someone else might do it based on 30 ACT.</p>
<p>And what if I can only afford to send one score? I know it would be ideal to send both but with it costing 11-12$ per sent score it would cost me quite a bit to send both scores to each and every school I am planning on applying to.</p>
<p>Then it is entirely upto you in how you want save money and why you are applying to a bunch of schools without considering whether it is worth applying to them.</p>
<p>There are schools out there which give specific merit money based on specific SAT/ACT scores. However, most of them have deadlines which you might be missing if you have not done that research already and if you are a senior.</p>
<p>If you can afford it send both</p>