The way I look at it is that if we are evaluated against someone that has the same basic file as ours but we have test scores, that's an insurance policy to the college that we will be able to get good grades, I don't think the bump is significant. We are probably applying to many of the same schools and even though 1/3 or 1/2 might not have a test score to report, I feel that many without reporting a score will be admitted ahead of us because they have other attributes those colleges are looking for specifically to build their class. I have a 35 and an 11 writing score, 35 Stem Score, and a 35 ELA score so I did some research and decided that there is no reason in this cycle to use valuable time to try to get a 36. I have asked myself this question about the ACT. There are even more people out there applying w/o SAT II test scores than an SAT/ACT score. To answer your question about SAT IIs, I'd say they are especially less important this cycle because many schools have either dropped the requirement entirely or made them optional. Caltech and MIT do have lots of applicants in past years that had the 1560s but this year MIT is test-optional and test blind on SAT 2 scores, and CalTech is test blind all across the board. So statistically, there is no advantage to having a higher SAT score than 1560. If having a 1560+ was a requirement at any school or increased the acceptance rate, then we would see more evidence in the Common Data Sets that support that but if you do a deep dive into saying the Top 20, you will see that there are actually more students who get admitted with 1450-1500 scores than 1550-1600 scores. The top 75 colleges get about 1.4 million applications (many are overlaps from the same people so I don't know how many are unique) and they accept about 200,000 each admissions cycle. Scoring 1560 is the 99.5th Percentile so if 1 million people (Versus 2.2 million last year prior to COVID-19) took the SAT, then at any given sitting, only 5,000 people in the world have a better score.
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