Is the College of Natural Sciences easy to get into...

<p>if you’re outside of the desired percent? I live in state and I’ll probably end up top 13% or so.</p>

<p>It would come down to your SAT scores and ECs. The CNS isn’t overly hard to gain accepted into (unlike McCombs and Cockrell), but it is harder to gain admission into than CLA and Communication, etc.</p>

<p>Does UT superscore?</p>

<p>No it does not =/</p>

<p>

[Testing</a> & Test Scores | Be a Longhorn](<a href=“http://bealonghorn.utexas.edu/freshmen/admission/testing]Testing”>http://bealonghorn.utexas.edu/freshmen/admission/testing)</p>

<p>Ugh. Do they care if you take the SAT like 5 times?</p>

<p>I’m not 100% sure, but from what they said about only using the highest score, it shouldn’t matter.
Although at the same time you shouldn’t retake multiple times you’re just taking the test every month with no studying, practice or improvement. Waste of money. Practice books/guides would be a better investment if you just want practice.</p>

<p>Just don’t take the SAT more than 3 times at most.</p>

<p>hmmmmmmmmm</p>

<p>It just looks bad if you take it more than 3 times. Once you take it 3 times, it’s likely you won’t see any significant improvement anyways. Just try to take it twice. Make sure you are very prepared for the test and you won’t have to take it more than twice (or three times).</p>

<p>Alright. I will try to practice hard with the practice tests!</p>

<p>Make sure you understand the questions first. Practice tests won’t help if you’re not learning from them! Good luck and Hook 'Em!</p>

<p>I read on their website that UT accepts Score Choice. So theoretically I could take the SAT as many times as I wanted, right?</p>

<p>Yes, but 3 is definitely the max you should take. Any more than that and you’re wasting your time and money as someone said earlier. Even if you intend on taking 3, it’s wiser to spread them out and prepare for each one adequately. One shot, one kill is ideal but the 2nd test score is almost always an improvement on the first. Marginal increases in score rapidly decrease into nonexistence from there.</p>

<p>Hmmm alright, thanks!</p>