Schools requiring all scores

<p>So I’ve read that some schools (like Yale, that’s the one I’ve heard the most), won’t do super-scoring. </p>

<p>But let’s say I do really really horrid on my first SAT I and SAT IIs, can I just <em>discard</em> these first sittings and send the second? </p>

<p>All scores: Cornell, Yale, UPenn, and Stanford.</p>

<p>@planner03 Does that mean every sitting? </p>

<p>yes, all scores means all the scores from every test(SAT/ACT) you’ve taken</p>

<p>It’s a more extensive list than those four.</p>

<p>Top schools that DO NOT Accept Score Choice:</p>

<p>UNIVERSITIES:</p>

<p>Carnegie Mellon University
Cornell University
Georgetown University
University of California campuses
University of Pennsylvania
Rice University
Stanford University
Yale University</p>

<p>LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGES:</p>

<p>Colgate University
Harvey Mudd College
Macalester College
Pomona College</p>

<p>Others:</p>

<p>All SUNY and CUNYs</p>

<p>For other schools, see CollegeBoard link:
<a href=“http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/sat-score-use-practices-list.pdf”>http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/sat-score-use-practices-list.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>@maymay5678 In May I took the SAT IIs, got 510 (yikes, def underestimated) in literature and 680 in US History. Yale and UPenn are on my list… so say I boost my lit and US scores to the high 700s - aim for that golden 800, will the increase look nice or am I f’ed anyways? </p>

<p>They will look at your higher score, but they will see them all. Will that affect your chances? Probably not, but they are both <10% acceptance rate schools, so nobody here will know definitively.</p>