Legitimate Question.

<p>Hello.
Any help with the following question is certainly welcome, but an answer from MIT representatives would help me the most(MITChris,etc.).</p>

<p>I am an international student from a community college in Georgia and I will apply as a transfer.
I have already taken the most challenging classes at my school (Differential Eqs., Linear Algebra, Multi var. calc, Physics, etc.) and got all A’s.
However, I did not do exceptionally well on the sat Math II and got 700. Since the math II covers mostly material that is not repeated in most higher division classes, is it truly an indicator of my academic potential or success ?
I got a good score on my Toefl and 800 on the other science SAT II physics, which is more related to what I am currently studying. </p>

<p>So, will the admission committee understand that after taking multi var. calculus, differential equations, and linear algebra, there is no point in tedious test prep for a subject from 10th grade in high school(pre calc)?</p>

<p>Of course, I could crack a pre calc book and study to retake the test… But that would impede me with my busy course load. Honestly, I see no point in studying hyperboles/circles/memorizing(pre calc) formulas after taking multi var. calc (post calc, lol). </p>

<p>Thank you all ahead of time.</p>

<p>We’re going to care more about your college courses than your SAT scores. This holds true for any transfer student.</p>

<p>Thank you.</p>