Excerpt from The Parent’s Guide to the SAT and ACT by James Pipkin, 2007
Many parents come to a crossroads regarding which admissions
test would be best for their child. Many stick with the test that is more
prevalent among colleges in their area. For example, the ACT is more prevalent
in Oklahoma and Arkansas, whereas the SAT is more popular in Texas.
Surprisingly, this is not because colleges in these places exclusively require
one test or the
other. In fact, I do not know of a single school in any of these
three states that exclusively requires either test. Therefore, students should
choose according to what is best for them.
The best approach for nearly every student is to take both. A
student may elect not to send the scores to schools from any test until he or
she is ready. For example, say a student plans to take both tests during the
spring of their junior year but is not sure how they will do. They can decide
not to send the scores to any colleges until they find out how they did. There
is an additional fee but it might be worth it just to relieve some of the
pressure. If they like their, scores they can go ahead and have them sent to
the colleges to which they are applying or they can decide to take either test
again and then send the scores. When colleges receive the scores, the last six
scores
will show up on the SAT. (I am not sure of this practice with
the ACT.)
Another reason to take both is that some students may do better
on one test than the other. This may depend on a student having skills that are
better suited to one test more than the other. For example, some students who
have strong vocabularies have an advantage on the SAT because of the sentence completion
questions, which require you to pick which word fits in the blank in a
sentence. Likewise, students who know all the key math formulae have an edge on
the ACT because these useful formulae are not included in the test
instructions; students must know them. In contrast, these formulae are present
as part of the SAT instructions so students do not have to know or memorize
them.
Sometimes a student may feel more comfortable with the nature
and design of one test over the other. I had a student last year who did well
on the ACT math section but poorly on the SAT math section. This difference appeared
consistently on both real and practice tests. She was above the 60th
percentile on the ACT math section and around the 40th percentile on the SAT
math section. The only explanation I could come up with was that the layout of
the ACT fit her better. Taking both tests will give the student feedback that
he or she can use to decide if another test is a good idea and which test on
which to focus their preparation. If the student does considerably better on
one test, they should probably study for and take that test again.
James Pipkinwww.knowledgeguides.net