<p>Hey guys,
I’m just wondering how stringent Georgetown is about its 3 subject test “requirement”. I read this on their website:
The wording used does not make it seem an actual requirement but only a suggestion. Obviously the unhooked candidate would be best off taking and submitting 3 SAT 2s, but would a recruited athlete (particularly a basketball player) be required to take 3 SAT 2s? It seems unlikely that many of these big-time athletes have fulfilled those requirements, and given the wording on the website perhaps I am correct in speculating that Georgetown does not truly require 3 SAT subject tests, at least for certain applicants. Thoughts?</p>
<p>Yes. That’s why it says “strongly recommended,” not “required.”</p>
<p>Wait, so is it actually required that we take any at all or do we need to take 3?</p>
<p>If you are the average RD applicant then you should take 3 SAT IIs. Even legacies.</p>
<p>I would think that not taking 3 SAT IIs would appear to the adcom as someone who didn’t have enough motivation to do the things that Gtown requires. It’s not like you have to take a whole other day to do 3 SAT IIs - you can do 3 in one sitting, it’s not that hard.</p>
<p>This is all personal speculation, but if I were on the adcom and I had two people with similar stats, and one had made the effort to take (and do well on) 3 SAT IIs, that would be the person I would give admission too.
Shoot, I might even subconsciously dismiss the person who didn’t do them and regard their application in a completely different like because of their lackadaisical demeanor I would infer.</p>
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<p>NB: Georgetown doesn’t use AP scores in the admissions process, only for awarding credit.</p>
<p>By the way I ask this question as a possible recruited athlete myself.</p>