Anonymous wrote:They definitely should get rid of superscoring but nearly every selective college allows it, except for Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know about the ACT, but for the SAT say kid took it 2x. First time got 700M and 600V for a 1300. Second time got a 600M and 700V, again a 1300. Superscored it would be a 1400, but you have to submit both composite scores to prove that, so the colleges will see the 600s (and almost certainly won’t care).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were at a Georgetown information session not too long ago. Georgetown requires all scores be submitted. The admissions rep running the session said that while they expect to see more than one, "a whole page of scores" is not what they expect to see.
I interpreted that to mean that for Georgetown, diminishing returns is real
I wish all schools required submission of all scores. Starting at ACT27 and getting 35 eventually is very different than the 35 on one try.
Especially with certain private schools having 40% of kids get extra time
You're mixing up two different issues.
1) Well-off kids are in substantial test prep that's going to help them anyway. Yes, your kid may improve each time they take the real test, but that's not the major thing driving inequity.
2) Extra time on test given due to learning disabilities isn't indicated to colleges. Not sure how you know 40% of kids get extra time at certain schools, unless you're employed there in some capacity supporting special needs, in which case you shouldn't be gossiping on DCUM about confidential matters.
I thought colleges knew about extra time on sat or act?
No. Accommodations are not indicated on score reports. Because they aren’t an “edge”, they are an issue of accessibility. No one reports that their kid with 20/400 vision wore glasses for the test, either.
My dyslexic kid literally can’t read fast enough to get through all the material on the reading comp section. With extra time, DC can just finish the section and scores strongly (but not knocking it out the park—no 750-800 scores here).
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Sitting 1: 32, due to low English section.
---->Learned comma rules, etc.
Sitting 2: 34,
Superscore: 35
Worth taking again to get a single sitting 35?
Do schools care?
Anonymous wrote:Like most things I doubt it's a black/white answer. Some schools don't accept superscores, some only want best and highest, some want to see the scores of all tests, some are test blind, etc. I suspect it's best to assume their priority lies in what they ask for.
For DCUM parents on the other hand "one sitting" seems to be an important data point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Sitting 1: 32, due to low English section.
---->Learned comma rules, etc.
Sitting 2: 34,
Superscore: 35
Worth taking again to get a single sitting 35?
Do schools care?
i always thought single sitting is the 'first' sitting - one and only.
sure, but a college will never know if your "single sitting" was actually on try 5.
Even the Presidential Scholars program will not know (or care) about this.
WRONG! You have to report a TOTAL COMPOSITE FROM ONE SINGLE SITTING---even if you provide highest subscores with test dates. You can't provide the COMMON APP a superscored Composite score.
You report from a single siting:
Highest Composite (from one single test date)
Highest Verbal (with date)
Highest Reading (with date)
Highest Math (with date)
Highest Science (with date)
^if those 4 different dates make a higher composite--you can't report that under 'highest composite'--not on common app, or for UVA and other schools.
The schools will receive a 'superscore' report if you send it which will have all the scores from any test you used to generate a 'composite' and it will have a superscore composite on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Sitting 1: 32, due to low English section.
---->Learned comma rules, etc.
Sitting 2: 34,
Superscore: 35
Worth taking again to get a single sitting 35?
Do schools care?
i always thought single sitting is the 'first' sitting - one and only.
sure, but a college will never know if your "single sitting" was actually on try 5.
Even the Presidential Scholars program will not know (or care) about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Sitting 1: 32, due to low English section.
---->Learned comma rules, etc.
Sitting 2: 34,
Superscore: 35
Worth taking again to get a single sitting 35?
Do schools care?
i always thought single sitting is the 'first' sitting - one and only.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Sitting 1: 32, due to low English section.
---->Learned comma rules, etc.
Sitting 2: 34,
Superscore: 35
Worth taking again to get a single sitting 35?
Do schools care?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sure on a tiny level, it is noted those who do it in one setting.
Is it? I hope so. Superscoring is just more evidence of the dumbing down of expectations.
Superscoring has been around for decades. I graduated high school in 1993 and there was superscoring.