Tuesday, November 24, 2020

When should you take the SAT and ACT

 One question I often hear from parents and students is “When is the right time to take the SAT and ACT?” There are a lot of factors that can influence a proper answer to this, but I do have a general prescription I’ll offer below. First though, there’s some important things to keep in mind regarding these tests.

The first is that the SAT and ACT are two different brands of the same thing. Most colleges will accept them interchangeably and I often refer to them that way. I also think it is important to take these tests multiple times. Experience with the test seems to have an impact on scores. Scores usually rise, to a point, with multiple tests so to some degree more tests can equate to better scores. Lastly, many, but not all, colleges and universities will super score the SAT and ACT. That means they will take the highest sub-tests taken on different dates and combine those for your best score. So, for example if you took an SAT in October and got a 600 in reading and a 550 in math and then took it again in March and got a 590 in reading and a 610 in math, your SAT super score would be 1210--that’s the 600 in reading from October and the 610 in math from March. The ACT super score would be the average of the best subscores across multiple tests.

So when do you take the test? Both the SAT and ACT are only offered a few times a year on national test dates which are always Saturdays except for some individual circumstances. The tests are administered at testing centers, often high schools, and anyone is eligible to test at any test center. In other words, you don’t have to attend a given high school to take a test there. Most test centers do not offer every test date so the exact dates you test might be impacted by when your preferred test center offers the test and that’s okay. 

Junior year is the time to start testing and I like to see a student take their first test (SAT or ACT) in the fall, perhaps October. Then in late winter or early spring (February or March), juniors should take the other test as well as a second sitting of the test they took in the fall. Now, students should have some idea of what each test is like and be starting to develop a preference and some familiarity. The ACT and SAT are both offered in early June and I think this test at the end of junior year has the most potential. Students have learned everything they can through 3 years of high school, and as school winds down hopefully they have a little more time in the days prior to the test to cram in some standardized test prep. Students can choose which test they prefer for this June test, or they may consider taking both. 

If there is a particular target score a student is trying to hit, perhaps to reach the minimum threshold for a scholarship or if they are close to a number that seems to fit a certain range of scores their favorite university might be interested in, students can take one or two more swings at a test as early as possible in the fall of their senior year. After that, college applications will be due and more tests will miss the cutoffs for college admission purposes.

So, that’s my prescribed testing timeline. Maybe the best thing I can say is don’t procrastinate in getting the ball rolling early in junior year. Take a fall test, allow yourself to get a sense of what the tests are like, and work to improve your score from there.