Anonymous wrote:our kid was a senior last year. one sitting 35 act with no tutoring. Had a 3.87 UW GPA. rejected from many schools. It is a mystery as we head into a new round of college admissions with our other kid.
Anonymous wrote:They definitely should get rid of superscoring but nearly every selective college allows it, except for Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Because we paid so much $$$$ for those private tutoring sessions that we expect results — at one sitting!
^^^
One and done are usually the people who didn’t have to prep much. It is just a measure of their ability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like most things I doubt it's a black/white answer. Some schools don't accept superscores, some only want best and highest, some want to see the scores of all tests, some are test blind, etc. I suspect it's best to assume their priority lies in what they ask for.
For DCUM parents on the other hand "one sitting" seems to be an important data point.
Because we paid so much $$$$ for those private tutoring sessions that we expect results — at one sitting!
^^^
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone clarify- ACT Composite from one single sitting on one single date is what is self reported on Common App. You can then send ONLY this singular test if this each sub section on this test is your highest? If you bombed every section on your first attempt, you will never have to send this test to colleges since you are self reporting data only from the single test? Alternatively, if you do have higher sub sections you choose to list below the compooist from subsequent attempts, you could still never have to send the original test you bombed ever? Thank you.
Yes. You report a composite from one single test date- with date achieved- not your composite score.
Underneath that you enter highest score for subsections and date achieved. They can be from different test dates. But the composite on common app is from a single test date.
Then- when superscore report is officially sent it will provide scores from each test date used to get the highest composite. They will see all score from that single date.
I have a Senior and just went through this.
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
Anonymous wrote: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.
Because we paid so much $$$$ for those private tutoring sessions that we expect results — at one sitting!
Anonymous wrote:DCs only planned to take SAT, should I ask them to take both (SAT and ACT)? TY
Anonymous wrote:Can someone clarify- ACT Composite from one single sitting on one single date is what is self reported on Common App. You can then send ONLY this singular test if this each sub section on this test is your highest? If you bombed every section on your first attempt, you will never have to send this test to colleges since you are self reporting data only from the single test? Alternatively, if you do have higher sub sections you choose to list below the compooist from subsequent attempts, you could still never have to send the original test you bombed ever? Thank you.