Originally Posted by Rae50:
With all due respect Bucs Fan, your Ivy League experience, yours and your son's, don't seem relevant here because this man is saying his son is NOT a strong student. The worst thing a weaker student can do is take an early SAT.....If you get a low score, there are some schools that require that you send EVERY score which means you will have to send that one. Look, my son has a high score too so I don't see his experience as relevant for this man either. What is important for him to understand is that the SAT is fundamentally changing, the ACT may be a better option or not, he can wait until spring 2017 to take the test.....Most kids do not take the tests fall of junior year. My son's school tells only the Harvard-headed kids to do that. This man needs to know his son can wait and also take the time to figure out which test to take. No coach will walk away from real talent because there is no SAT score until April 2017.
Perhaps you haven't taken the time to read what I submitted above and/or perhaps you've not seen that many baseball recruits go through a recruiting cycle. It has nothing to do with Ivy or not, but nice try on that. Below in bold quotes are excerpts from what I've posted above that counter your assertions:
"I had forgotten about the change in format....ACT is a very good option and has been gaining ground on SAT. Only caution is that I don't think it is quite that simple. Some students score better on ACT vs. SAT and vice-a-versa. So, who knows if the ACT will play to his strength?. Unfortunately, there is not a simple answer or clear path"
"...Did he take the PSAT? That would be an indicator as well..."
More importantly....
I was pretty clear that whether a player is aspiring toward a high academic school or not (a "weaker student", as you like to call them), it still pays to know where one stands. Yes, many schools require students to submit all scores. But, did you actually think through whether or not that will hurt a baseball recruit or, do you just not have as much experience with how this goes down??? I haven't researched it, but I do believe that most of the schools that require students to submit all scores are on the "high academic" end of the spectrum anyway? If my assumption is correct, then your logic falls apart, as those "weaker students" (again, your label) likely are not applying to the schools that have a more rigorous application process and will not allow them to submit only their best scores. Even if my assumption is entirely incorrect (pretty sure it is not), those schools will still focus on and give a recruit credit for his highest score (or super score), especially if the baseball coach has anything to say about it. Further, isn't there something to be said for old fashioned hard work and perseverance? If a baseball recruit takes the ACT in the fall and gets a 23 (again, to see where he stands, practice, etc.), and then takes it again in Spring and gets a 26, don't you think there is a story to be told there by the applicant and the coach?: "Hey, this kid fell short the first time but worked his tail off...sure says a lot about his make up." Something tells me that might fly with admissions. I know several situations where coaches were asking borderline academic players to take the ACT or SAT early and then suggesting they take it again. I know very well a stud C who wanted to attend a certain service academy. He is a very average student and does not do well on standardized tests. That said, this academy wanted him badly, because he can play and really projects. They advised him to take the ACT (or SAT but he chose ACT) "early and often" to see if he could hit their hurdle. So, your comment that "The worst thing a weaker student can do is take an early SAT...." is just flat out wrong. May be true for a "weaker student" but certainly not for a "weaker student who is also a baseball recruit."
The other flaw in your suggested approach to waiting until Spring is based solely on timing for a baseball recruit. This is HSbaseballweb after all. So, again, perhaps your logic applies to a typical student or a even football player / fall athlete. But, it otherwise falls short from a timing perspective in a couple of ways:
1. Spring is by far the busiest time of year for a baseball player who aspires to play in college, so why put the added pressure of having to prepare and get a great ACT or SAT score at your first sitting right in the middle of baseball season; and
2. If a "weaker student" who aspires to play baseball does fall short the first time and has to wait until..what...Fall of senior year??! to take it again. Are you kidding? Do you know how many coveted roster spots (vast majority of D1s) are already spoken for by then? Sure, a kid who is stud and ranked in PG's top 250 in the nation can wait, but most cannot. There are just too many good players out there to choose from (who will already have the score that the school needs to offer).
Best of luck as you navigate the waters. I'd be happy to help in anyway.