<p>I scored:</p>
<p>790 Math I
760 Math II</p>
<p>Which one should I send? Do they care whether you submit Math I or Math II? Because my Math I score is better.</p>
<p>I scored:</p>
<p>790 Math I
760 Math II</p>
<p>Which one should I send? Do they care whether you submit Math I or Math II? Because my Math I score is better.</p>
<p>Another question:</p>
<p>How do I list these courses? My school doesn’t have “english” or “history”, they just have “American Studies” each year, which is a combination of both. I think they count as an english credit, so I listed them all under “english”. However, this means that I don’t have anything to put under social sciences besides AP Euro. Is this okay?</p>
<p>^This is a question you should ask directly to the admissions office.</p>
<p>My feeling is that your guidance counselor should explain this in their description of the school and/or you could send a separate note.</p>
<p>Okay! I already have notes about my school’s lack of AP spanish or an honors science/english track, so I’m going to consider asking my GC to talk about all of this instead haha</p>
<p>I don’t think the Admissions office is going to care very deeply about how you categorize your classes, as long as your doing something reasonable. They just want to get a sense of your coursework - they know different schools have different systems and divisions.</p>
<p>For ur first question, submit them both</p>
<p>Okay thanks! And yes but which one under the official math test score section thing?</p>
<p>Generally, it is the job of the GC to explain how things work at your school.</p>
<p>It is generally recommended that you take 4 years in each core subject area, though I don’t remember the exact wording. For this reason, it might important to tell them if two of the core subjects is lumped into one class.</p>
<p>It seems a reasonable question for the admissions office.</p>
<p>Alright I’ll figure it out. Any ideas about which math to submit?</p>
<p>You should write the score with the higher percentile rank on your application. Overall, it doesn’t really matter which you write on the application – if you send both scores on your SAT report, MIT will use the best one. I don’t recall whether they use absolute score or percentile to choose.</p>