Should I take the SAT'S twice? HELP!!

<p>I’m in grade 10, moving into grade 11 next September. I’m enlisted in the IB program and want to pursure a career in Law or Investment banking and am hoping to go to Stanford or an Ivy League. My courses next year will be CHEM SL, FRENCH SL, MATH SL, ENGLISH HL, HISTORY HL, BIO HL.
SL= Standard Level
HL=Higher Level</p>

<p>I want to take my SAT’S at the end of June of my grade 11 year but I’m wondering if I should take one earlier? I’m taking my subject tests certainly at the end of June next year hence my course selections (BIO HL, CHEM SL, ENG HL).</p>

<p>Should I take the SAT general test this year? Or take it at the end of grade 11 when I’m much more knowledgable? Or just take it twice to increase my chances of doing better?</p>

<p>take it and see how you do in like january, if the scores are bad take it again</p>

<p>Dude, from experience, take it when uve practiced enough. When you can get the score you want continuously on practice tests, take it. It does not matter what you know, although math is sometimes a exception. It really matters on how much you practice. From experience, i would try to ace it the first time</p>

<p>you can definitely take the SAT twice. show improvement and impress admissions committees</p>

<p>Take the June Junior year and the October Senior year. You will have had the most preparation (classes at school DO prepare you for taking the test) and you don’t need any more than those 2.</p>

<p>Unless, of course, you LIKE filling up Saturday with tests and paying the College Board for the honor.</p>

<p>English A1 HL will not help you too much with your SATs-it’s more up to you and what you do with the books and in general with your literary exposition (I’m gonna be IB2 next year)</p>

<p>Here’s a general answer about retakes of college admission tests: </p>

<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showpost.php?p=4198038&postcount=1[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showpost.php?p=4198038&postcount=1&lt;/a&gt; </p>

<p>You should, for sure, prepare well each time you take a test–why not?</p>

<p>Go ahead and take it now. If you have a good vocabulary and know the math content, there’s no time like the present. I got a 2370 sophomore year. Why retake? It would probably go down:)</p>

<p>Go ahead and take it – taking it twice won’t hurt you at all (unless, that is, you go down). </p>

<p>@ Sishu7…that’s nice that you got a 2370, but that’s totally irrelevant to this thread. Sounds like somebody’s just trying to brag.</p>

<p>No only take it once. Who wants to spend another 42.50 for the test, although this test is VERY important for your life and college. Too bad if you do bad on the test. </p>

<p>Just kidding!!! Take it twice or thrice.</p>

<p>My imput is: prepare like hell for the first time. Make an annual study plan and stick to it. Then, sit for the SAT, and depending on your scores, resit for it. Three times is the unofficial limit-from above three times, it starts looking, well, not so good.</p>

<p>I guess I’ll paste in the content of the link I have previously provided in this thread, since its content was missed by some subsequent replies. </p>

<p>I attended the the Exploring College Options consortium (Duke, Georgetown, Harvard, Penn, and Stanford) meeting on 10 May 2007 in Bloomington, Minnesota specifically to ask about this issue. Before the meeting, I emailed ahead to the admission offices of Duke, Harvard, Penn, and Stanford with quotations from earlier CC threads, all publicly viewable threads indexed by Google, in which students asked about the issue of retaking the SAT I. I also included short “fair-use” quotations from some replies (of varying points of view) that those student questions elicited.</p>

<p>After slide shows about each college, the audience of more than 200 students (and many parents) was allowed to ask general questions. I looked around to make sure I wouldn’t cut off a student, and then stood up to ask my question. I said that I have seen many online discussions in which a student has taken the SAT I once, and is concerned about taking it again. I asked if that could have a bad effect on how the college would view the student’s first score, to report more than one score. The Georgetown admission representative (the only one I didn’t write to ahead of time) replied that when there are SAT I retakes after the second time, score increases are not usually seen. But Georgetown counts an applicant’s highest score, section by section, and does so even if some of the scores come from the old two-section SAT I rather than the current three-section SAT I.</p>

<p>The Harvard representative, admission officer Julia Topalian, looked me right in the eye as she said, “Take it ten times if you want to; it’s not going to hurt you.” She continued by saying that test scores are but one element in evaluating applicants for admission, and “how you use your time is important.” Harvard will look at what an applicant’s extracurricular activities (ECs) are, and taking admission tests is not considered an EC. But specific to the issue of retaking the test, “You can take it as many times as you like.”</p>

<p>I thought that was a good response to the groundless worries so many students have about one or two retakes before the final deadline for submitting SAT I scores for an admission application. (By the way, the Harvard representative said in a later discussion specific to questions about Harvard that the first admission test [SAT I or ACT with writing] in the year 2008 will still be timely for class of 2008 applicants in Harvard’s new one-deadline application cycle. She also said it is NEVER necessary to rush scores–rushed scores and regular service scores arrive at Harvard at exactly the same time.) Don’t worry–don’t worry at all–if you think there is a good reason for you to retake the SAT I (or ACT). Do remember that Harvard (and other fine colleges) every year pass over applicants with peak test scores to admit students with lower scores who have other desirable characteristics. There is no special admission wallop to taking the SAT I only once, and no guarantee of admission even with a perfect score. The 2006-2007 Official Register of Harvard University, a publication of the admission office, says, “You may take tests more than once; we consider only your highest scores.”</p>

<p>All comparable colleges have similar policies, so this isn’t an issue to worry about. I hope this helps the applicants in high school classes of 2008, 2009, and subsequent classes worry less and enjoy their activities more.</p>

<p>Sure, retaking is not bad at all, but how would it look if you had taken the SAT 7 or 8 times, not to mention people at CC that have exorbitant retake numbers…clearly, no matter what, a huge retake number is not going to improve your application, more like deteriorate it.</p>

<p>Context is everything. The Harvard admission officer made clear that if you had a good reason to take the SAT I five times, or seven times, or even ten times, you would just have to explain what that reason was and everything would be cool.</p>

<p>I agree that context is everything, but lets generalize a bit-after all, specifying can be just as harmful. After all, the statement “My SATs are not good enough for Harvard” does not qualify as a justification for taking the SATs 7 times.</p>

<p>I thought the Harvard representative could hardly be clearer, but I guess not everyone takes the same approach to reading what the representative said (and what publications from that college have in writing about the college’s policies). And perhaps that is why a critical reading test is one element of an application to most selective colleges.</p>