Anonymous wrote:Nothing to hide at all. All best. One's at a wonderful school with less restrictive policies but better ranked than G-town. The other will undoubtedly find their place too. Lazy? Well I guess when I post snark I will receive it. I realize I am venting so I apologize for any offense. Anyone living through the 2021 and 2022 cycle will understand that it was hard on all students. They will all find their place, and I wish you all the best.
Anonymous wrote:My kids don’t/didn’t have any interest in applying to Gtown. But I don’t get the issue, OP. I’d argue that disclosing all test scores, instead of cherry picking, shows a better representation of what a student is capable of and helps drives down the rat race of sitting for the SAT 3 times. Also, TEA is no different than ED which plenty of colleges offer. The impression I get from their requirements is that Gtown wants students who truly want them, which *should* make the process more reliable for all (they aren’t getting applicants who just want to check the box on applying to lots if ivies/ivy-adjacents or who throw in an application because they can check another box on Common App).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean, they demand all test scores? How would they know you took them? If they want kids to take an SAT test, sure, then you give them the score. But how would they know you took it several times - can you just ask the College Board to disclose just the one you prefer? Same for AP exams: can you just release the scores that reflect well on you?
NP here. They require you send all. You would be lying on your application if you did not. Personally, I think all colleges should require that. There is a big difference between a kid who takes the SAT 23 times (I saw a kid’s post on Reddit who said he did this) to get to a 1600 and a kid who takes it once or twice. The scores are inflated, which increases pressure, because of this nonsense. Let’s make people show what’s going on behind the curtain so all of the insanity is exposed and the colleges can see what they are really getting.
It sounded like OP’s concern was more about AP exams, though.
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean, they demand all test scores? How would they know you took them? If they want kids to take an SAT test, sure, then you give them the score. But how would they know you took it several times - can you just ask the College Board to disclose just the one you prefer? Same for AP exams: can you just release the scores that reflect well on you?