Lynn O'Shaughnessy

The College Solution

Which Test Scores to Send: SAT or ACT?

By Lynn O'Shaughnessy | Apr 15, 2009 |

Some teenagers perform better on the SAT, while others fare better on the ACT. And frankly it doesn’t matter because all colleges and universities will accept scores from either test. The ACT is more popular in the Midwest, while the SAT is the favored test on either coast.

The ACT is considered less coachable. That’s because it tests for knowledge that teenagers should have already absorbed in their high school classes. In contrast, the SAT tests for problem-solving abilities and is more of an aptitude test.

Even after the scores are in, however, it can be difficult to know whether your teenager’s ACT or SAT results are more impressive. A perfect SAT score is 2400. A perfect ACT score is just 36. Wonder no longer. Here’s an ACT and SAT conversion chart, so you can compare scores of both tests:

ACT        SAT

36        2400
35        2340
34        2260
33        2190
32        2130
31        2040
30        1980
29        1920
28        1860
27        1820
26        1760
25        1700
24        1650
23        1590
22        1530
21        1500
20        1410
19        1350
18        1290
17        1210
16        1140
15        1060
14        1000
13          900
12          780
11          750

Send whichever score is higher on this chart. For example, if your teen got 2100 on the SAT but 34 on the ACT, send the ACT.

What if neither a teen’s ACT and SAT scores look good? There’s always Plan B: check out the list of ACT and SAT-optional schools at FairTest.org.

Further Reading:

How to Survive a Bad SAT Score

Why Your Teen Needs a “B” Average

How Does Your Teen’s SAT Scores Compare

 
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  •  
    1

    jbpski

    04/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Which Test Scores to Send: SAT or ACT?

    Do you happen to have a conversion chart based on the SAT score of 1600 since many schools do not use the writing portion score of the SAT?

  •  
    2

    The College Solution

    04/17/09 | Report as spam

    Here's your answer!

    You're in luck. In the bowels of the College Board site is a conversion chart that compares ACT scores with SAT scores based on the 1600 scale, which was used before the writing section was implemented.

    Here is the link: http://professionals.collegeboard.com/data-reports-research/sat/sat-act

  •  
    3

    Teen mom

    04/17/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Which Test Scores to Send: SAT or ACT?

    Thanks for the great resource...I've been looking for
    something like this.

  •  
    4

    ASURichard

    04/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Which Test Scores to Send: SAT or ACT?

    Lynn,

    Where does your conversion chart originate from?
    I would like reference it here at the university where I work:
    Angelo State University.

    Thanks

  •  
    5

    The College Solution

    04/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Which Test Scores to Send: SAT or ACT?

    Thanks for asking. I obtained the conversion chart from Dale Maeder, PhD, who teaches at UCLA Extension's college counseling program.

  •  
    6

    emdwayne

    10/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Which Test Scores to Send: SAT or ACT?

    unfortunately its not as simple as SAT vs. ACT. The first admissions school I called said they look at both SAT & ACT together. They would take your best Math (from either SAT or ACT) and your best Reading (from either SAT or ACT) And the score they compare to your Critical Reading in the SAT is NOT the Reading score in ACT, instead it's the English score.

    They did still look at the Composite ACT score but actually pulled out the Math and English and Combined English/Writing scores to compare with the equivalents in the SAT.

    I wonder how many schools do it that way?

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Lynn O'Shaughnessy

Lynn O'Shaughnessy is a financial journalist and the author of a critically acclaimed book, The College Solution: A Guide for Everyone Looking for the Right School at the Right Price. She has been a contributor to such publications as BusinessWeek, USA Today, Money Magazine, Medical Economics, The New York Times, Consumer Reports MoneyAdvisor, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, AARP: The Magazine and Kiplinger

Lynn O'Shaughnessy

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