Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The college counselors at my DC’s private school just sent out a communication in the school’s weekly newsletter saying 4 of 6 students accepted to Stanford last year and 7 of 11 accepted to Cornell did not submit scores. So I’m not worried about my senior DC not taking the SAT.
One, last year isn't this year. This year, there's an SAT testing facility near you that is open. Last year, there likely was not.Ad coms know this very well, regardless of their official party line.
Two, a lot of those kids accepted last year to top flight schools without objective scores and grades were key athletes. That will be the case this year too. Is your DC a recruited athlete? Does your DC diversify the university's student body? If not, trying to hide his score in a year where testing sites are open and ready for business will backfire. They'll know it's low and you're not bringing anything distinct or intriguing to offset that
No, as I said, we are in Northern California, and test sites have not been open. Out of the six kids that were accepted to Stanford, none were athletes. Only one was a URM. None were first generation or economically disadvantaged. You know not of what you speak.
Anonymous wrote:This is from the Union College (in NY) website. Really helpful - wish more schools laid out their thinking like this:
When deciding whether or not to submit testing, consider the average score or middle 50% range of scores for Union. For enrolling students, the middle 50% range for the SAT is 1290-1410 [math + reading only] and the middle 50% for the ACT is 28-32. If your tests meet or exceed these averages, we recommend submitting them. If you have SAT or ACT scores from multiple test dates, we will superscore. In a typical enrolled class at Union, 35-40% of students did not submit testing.
Anonymous wrote:It is 2022 cycle. The kids should have all been able to take the SAT at least once. While the schools say the test is optional, it really isn't.
What happened for the 2021 cycle has absolutely no bearing on this cycle. People should be looking more to the 2020 cycle that was not really interrupted by COVID the way 2021 was.
Again: we all understand that going test optional this year has nothing to do with a lack of opportunity to take the test. It is an option some students might exercise if they feel their test scores aren't indicative of their abilities. Many smart kids are terrible standardized test takers.
Anonymous wrote:The college counselors at my DC’s private school just sent out a communication in the school’s weekly newsletter saying 4 of 6 students accepted to Stanford last year and 7 of 11 accepted to Cornell did not submit scores. So I’m not worried about my senior DC not taking the SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The college counselors at my DC’s private school just sent out a communication in the school’s weekly newsletter saying 4 of 6 students accepted to Stanford last year and 7 of 11 accepted to Cornell did not submit scores. So I’m not worried about my senior DC not taking the SAT.
One, last year isn't this year. This year, there's an SAT testing facility near you that is open. Last year, there likely was not.Ad coms know this very well, regardless of their official party line.
Two, a lot of those kids accepted last year to top flight schools without objective scores and grades were key athletes. That will be the case this year too. Is your DC a recruited athlete? Does your DC diversify the university's student body? If not, trying to hide his score in a year where testing sites are open and ready for business will backfire. They'll know it's low and you're not bringing anything distinct or intriguing to offset that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are from a UMC background and aren't submitting scores, that will not work in your favor.
How will admissions know if the student is from
an UMC background?
FAFSA
Common App responses
Democgraphics of the high school
and if the school is small enough, google
Anonymous wrote:The college counselors at my DC’s private school just sent out a communication in the school’s weekly newsletter saying 4 of 6 students accepted to Stanford last year and 7 of 11 accepted to Cornell did not submit scores. So I’m not worried about my senior DC not taking the SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, our schools are not highly competitive for top students. I have an average student who wants to get into the safeties of top students. Still, their scores are at the low end but still within the middle 50%. No one seems to know what to tell us. In reality it probably doesn’t matter if she submits or not because I will second guess myself if she doesn’t get in either way.
We are in the same boat. Applying to a "safety" university but SAT scores are in the 25-50% range for the engineering school, which is where DC is applying. To further complicate, 40% of admitted engineering students last year did not submit scores, so is that 25-75 range really reflective of the students they admit? Who knows?
You don't understand what a "safety" is. A school where your kid's SATs are in the 25-50 range is NOT a safety for your kid.
I do understand. I was following on previous post on applicants to schools that are widely considered safety schools on DCUM, but aren't that for all. Which is why I put "safety" in quotes. My point was about the total confusion about whether to submit scores or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here, our schools are not highly competitive for top students. I have an average student who wants to get into the safeties of top students. Still, their scores are at the low end but still within the middle 50%. No one seems to know what to tell us. In reality it probably doesn’t matter if she submits or not because I will second guess myself if she doesn’t get in either way.
We are in the same boat. Applying to a "safety" university but SAT scores are in the 25-50% range for the engineering school, which is where DC is applying. To further complicate, 40% of admitted engineering students last year did not submit scores, so is that 25-75 range really reflective of the students they admit? Who knows?
You don't understand what a "safety" is. A school where your kid's SATs are in the 25-50 range is NOT a safety for your kid.