Sats ----> Doom

<p>I just got my october SAT scores.
They only went up by 30 points from last may (1880–> 1910), (1270–> 1300)
Is this seriously going to hurt me in admissions? Should I definitely retake in December?</p>

<p>I think it depends on schools you will apply. If I were you, I’d retake it.</p>

<p>Your SAT falls way below Columbia’s average (1360-1550). So if you don’t have any other defining factors to advocate for you, then Columbia might as well be out of your reach. retaking may be an option for u (only if u r confident of making a significant improvement on ur previous scores). But if ur academics and extracurricular are good enough only ur meagre SAT score wont stand between u and ur acceptance letter.</p>

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<p>Retaking the SATs a 3rd time really wont work between IB coursework, and a major charity event with the orchestra I am in. I think Im going to try the ACTs. I otherwise think that my grades/GPA, course rigor, and extracurriculars are strong.</p>

<p>it’ll be very difficult but if you are a urm you still have a shot. If you don’t have any serious hook (even urm might not be enough) then it will be difficult, you should only apply to one or two schools like Columbia, I wouldn’t waste my time or money on more than 1 or 2. Columbia 25th percentile of accepted students is 2100, so 1900 probably puts you in the 0th -10th percentile of accepted students. Kids with such low scores have moved the earth to get in.</p>

<p>You should retake the SAT or take the ACT if you want a reasonable chance.</p>

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<p>Well, I am a URM, but I don’t rely on that to get in. I do have a 3.9 GPA and right now im 1st in my class, but to Ivy Leagues, Im sure that is a requirement.</p>

<p>You seem to have already made your decision and are just looking for justification not taking the exam again. Fine; don’t take it.</p>

<p>The fact is that standardized tests are a huge part of admission and that is a really subpar score. I would cut the charity work and focus on getting a passable score (which this is not) but if you don’t want to do that, KNOW that your application will strongly rely on you being a URM. And I’ve seen URMs with better scores and similar profiles (IB) get rejected.</p>