Recommendation: Save some money and time—use your four free score reports to send scores to colleges that want to see all your SAT scores. If you're only applying to schools that fall into that category and wait until your acceptances to send an official score report, you'll have to default to method 2, which we'll be covering next.
Ben Franklin and his three-pence paper money are proud of your frugality. You can also order SAT score reports through your College Board account any time after you get your scores.
In your account, you can see all of your SAT test dates and scores and choose which ones to send out. If you've graduated high school more than a year ago and haven't taken the SAT since then, or if you want to send scores from an SAT you took more than five years ago, you must request them from the archives. You can order old SAT scores in one of two ways note that you cannot order them online through your College Board account :.
Don't listen to these! Most colleges only look at official score reports sent directly by the College Board. You can't simply send schools a copy of your report, even if your deadline is approaching. Faxed a copy of your scores? Might as well have sent them this note. You can now decide whether you want the College Board to send all your SAT scores to colleges or whether you want to use a program called Score Choice. SAT Score Choice lets you pick which scores you send to schools.
You can select individual test dates, but not test sections. In other words, you pick the date of the SAT you want to send, and the College Board will send out scores from that test and that test only. Say you took the SAT three times, and the second time you were nursing a fever and just generally having a bad day.
Score Choice lets you send only the first and third test scores to colleges—so you can go ahead and consign that second one to the dustbin of history.
Now, let's discuss the best timing for sending SAT scores to colleges. In this section, we'll touch on how early to send your scores, when to expect scores to reach your colleges, whether to consider rush ordering your score reports, and finally what to do if you miss a deadline. The College Board claims that sending scores early shows colleges that you're a very interested applicant.
If you first take the SAT your junior year, then, should you go ahead and send that score to colleges you're particularly interested in?
It's true that some colleges do sometimes ask to see proof that an applicant sincerely wants to go to their school; this is called demonstrated interest. But this is something that usually comes into play after you've turned in your full application, usually as a way to move someone up on a waitlist.
Typically, sending SAT scores early does not give you an edge. Similarly, it doesn't count as demonstrated interest. This is because if you send SAT scores to a college but haven't applied there yet, the admission staff will simply save them under your name in a general file until your application shows up. And it's not only that. If you send your scores early and are planning to retake the SAT , you won't get the full benefit of Score Choice since you won't be able to compare your early score with ones from later tests you take.
Save getting there early for the Harry Potter swag line. It will be no surprise to hear that official SAT score reports should get to your schools by their respective application deadline. In order to figure out what this means in terms of when to send your scores, let's go through the timing of everything that happens after you take the test. I always hedge my bets, so I'd advise ordering test reports at least three weeks early for safety or, even better, as soon as you're done testing and know which schools you're applying to.
If you are worried about beating deadlines, you can pay extra for the College Board's rush service. Here are the pros and cons of doing so:. Recommendation: If your deadline is fast approaching, it might make sense to pay extra to buy yourself a little more time. Just keep in mind that colleges might not see your scores any faster if their delivery preferences aren't set up for priority reports.
Yes, sir—we have our very fastest messenger on it, sir. What happens to applications when SAT scores arrive late varies depending on each college's policy. Some schools have a hard and fast rule: late application materials disqualify that applicant. In short, late test scores are a big gamble —you're essentially betting that your application won't be considered until further into the process and that therefore your SAT scores still have a chance to get there without issue.
I got to eat the best food on my travel! In my last three years at Reed, I directed admissions for the entire continent of Asia and served as the director of marketing and communications for the admission office, honing our official voice for web, print, and social media.
While Reed is not known at all! After nine wonderful years at Reed, I left Portland to pursue a M. In the end, I missed the rain too much, and moved back to Portland in the summer of When students find themselves at the edge of their college application deadlines , I find they tend to whip themselves into a frenzy over every component of their applications.
Many students are concerned that test scores may not arrive in the hands of colleges and universities on time. And this is a reasonable concern. For the vast majority of schools, you need standardized test results to be submitted by the testing agencies in order to receive a decision from colleges.
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