Why did ACT suddenly reverse course and ditch the 1-36 score for ACT Writing?
ACT announced on June 28th, 2016 that as of the September 2016 test date ACT Writing scores will change once more. One of the most critical purposes of a test scale is to communicate information to the score user. In that regard, the 1-36 experiment with Writing was a failure. ACT has admitted that the scale “caused confusion” and created a “perceptual problem.” It is not yet clear if the new change — piled onto the class of 2017’s already large load of changes — will lessen the criticism that it has been receiving.
Is the test changing?
The essay task is not changing, and two readers will still be assigning 1-6 scores in four domains. ACT states, “Some language in the directions to the students has been modified to improve clarity.” It has not yet clarified what the clarification will be.
How will scores be reported going forward?
The basic scoring of the essay will remain unchanged, but the reporting is being overhauled. Two readers score each essay from 1-6 in four domains — Ideas & Analysis, Development & Support, Organization, and Language Use & Conventions. A student can receive a total of 8 to 48 points from the readers. On the test administrations from September 2015 to June 2016 this “raw score” was converted to a 1-36 scale to match the scaling process used in the primary ACT subject tests. The mean, distribution, and reliability, however, were fundamentally different for Writing than for English, Math, Reading, and Science. ACT should not have used the same scale for scores that behaved so differently.
The proposed change is to go back to a 2-12 score range used prior to September 2015. In yet another confusing twist, though, the 2-12 score range for 2016-2017 is very different than the one used in 2014-2015. Whereas the old ACT essay score was simply the sum of two readers’ holistic grades, the new 2-12 score range is defined as the “average domain score.” The average is rounded to the nearest integer, with scores of .5 being rounded up. For example, a student who receives scores of {4, 4, 4, 5} from Reader 1 and {4, 4, 5, 4} from Reader 2 would receive domain scores of {8, 8, 9, 9}. The student’s overall Writing score would be reported as a 9 (34/4 = 8.5).
Will the ELA score change?
In September 2015 ACT began reporting an ELA score that was the rounded average of English, Reading, and Writing scores. They also began reporting a STEM score that was the rounded average of Math and Science. Now that the Writing score is no longer on the 1-36 scale, it would seem that the ELA scoring would need to change. Except that ACT doesn’t want it to change. In effect, they are preserving the 1-36 scaling of Writing buried within the ELA calculation. “If you can’t see it, you can’t be confused” seems to be the message from ACT. Needless to say, we feel that the confusion exists on the other end of the line.
What does this mean regarding my plans to re-test in September? Will my February scores be converted into the new 2-12 scores?
In general, students should not be making re-testing plans based solely around ACT Writing scores. If you were planning on repeating the ACT in the fall, the score reporting change should not change your mind. If you are satisfied with your scores, you should tune out any hubbub surrounding the new reporting.
ACT has produced example student, high school, and college score reports corresponding to the September 2016 updates (some subscore categorizations are also changing!). ACT will continue to report scores by individual test date (College Board, in contrast, will report all of a student’s scores with each report). A student’s old 1-36 scores will not be changed.
If this is just a reporting change, how could it impact my ranking in any way?
This is where things start to get really confusing. There are any number of intersecting issues: percentiles (new, old, 1-36, 2-12, ELA), concorded scores, the scaling of individual test dates, and rounding artifacts.
What sort of problems can occur with averaging and rounding domain scores?
With the 1-36 scale, there were obviously 36 potential scores (although not all test forms produced all scores). On the 2-12 reporting, only 11 scores are possible. The tight range of scores typically assigned by readers and the unpredictability of those readers means that reader agreement is the exception rather than the norm. Even small grading differences can create large swings. For example, a student with scores of {4, 4, 3, 4} and {4, 4, 3, 3} would have a total of 29 points or an average domain score of 7 (7.25 rounded down). Had the student received even a single additional point from a single reader on a single domain, her scores would have added to 30 points and averaged 8 (7.5 rounded up). This seemingly inconsequential difference in reader scoring is the difference between the 84th percentile and the 59th percentile. And her readers were in close agreement!
ACT Writing scores are clustered around the mid-range. Readers gravitate toward giving 3s, 4s, and 5s. According to ACT’s percentile data for the 2-12 reporting (see below), 65% of students’ 2-12 scores will be 6s, 7s, or 8s.
Average Domain Score | Cumulative Percent |
---|---|
2 | 1 |
3 | 2 |
4 | 9 |
5 | 18 |
6 | 40 |
7 | 59 |
8 | 84 |
9 | 93 |
10 | 98 |
11 | 99 |
12 | 100 |
Visually, You can see how compact the range is, as well. Less than 5% of test-takers receive a 1, 2, 11, or 12.
Isn’t it a good thing that the essay is reported in gross terms rather than pretending to be overly precise?
Yes and no. The essay is a less reliable instrument than the other ACT tests and far less reliable than the Composite score. A criticism of the 1-36 scale for Writing was that it pretended a level of accuracy that it could not deliver — it is, after all, only a single question. What the change cannot do, however, is remake the underlying fundamentals of the test. The bouncing around of scoring systems has made ACT encourage the use of percentiles in gauging performance.
Percentiles cannot improve the reliability of a test. Percentiles cannot improve the validity of a test. Percentiles — like scaled scores — can easily provide a false sense of precision and ranking. To understand how this would work, take the most extreme example — completely random scores from 2 to 12. Even though there would be no value behind those scores, someone receiving a score report would still see a 7 as the 55th percentile and a 9 as the 73rd percentile. The student with the 9 clearly did better, right? Except that we know the scores were just throws at the dartboard. The percentile difference seems meaningful, but it is just noise.
ACT Writing scores are not random (although it may sometimes seem that way), but the test’s reliability is well below that of other ACT subjects. Percentiles are not the silver bullet of score interpretation. In a display of misleading precision, ACT released cumulative percents tallied to the hundredths place for a test that will have only 11 score buckets and a standard error of measurement of 1. College Board, by contrast, has opted to provide no norms for its new essay scores.
What percentiles should students and colleges use and believe?
Another problem with percentiles is that they are dependent upon the underlying pool of testers. It is interesting to note that students performed better on the ACT essay than ACT originally estimated. That may seem like a good thing, but it means that the newly released percentiles are more challenging. A 22, for example, was reported as 80th percentile when the 1-36 scale was introduced in 2015. The newly released data, however, shows a 22 as the 68th percentile.
The chart below shows how graphs of the cumulative percentiles differ across the range. This difference is unrelated to the new scoring — it’s the difference between the numbers ACT had been touting from its pilot study versus the actual results from the last year of testing. It’s clear on a number of counts that ACT misjudged student performance. They  either set the mean below where it should have been (20-21 to match the other subjects), or they tried to set it in the right place and were waylaid by readers grading more harshly than expected. The last option is the most difficult to believe — they set the mean well below the other subject means, not realizing the confusion that would be caused. It’s unknown how the percentile figures may have evolved over time. Was it an advantage or a disadvantage to have more experienced readers by the February and April tests?
Students making judgments about scores would have had no way of knowing the actual score distribution. In fact, they would have received the incorrect percentile tables with their reports. Presumably the new tables will be used when presenting scores to colleges, although ACT has not yet clarified that point. The table below shows new and old percentile figures and the difference.
ACT Writing Score 1-36 Scale | Cumulative Percent (Stated Summer 2016) | Cumulative Percent (Stated Summer 2015) | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
2 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
3 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
4 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
5 | 2 | 4 | 2 |
6 | 2 | 6 | 4 |
7 | 3 | 8 | 5 |
8 | 3 | 8 | 5 |
9 | 7 | 13 | 6 |
10 | 9 | 16 | 7 |
11 | 11 | 19 | 8 |
12 | 15 | 23 | 8 |
13 | 18 | 31 | 13 |
14 | 21 | 35 | 14 |
15 | 25 | 37 | 12 |
16 | 34 | 44 | 10 |
17 | 40 | 52 | 12 |
18 | 44 | 58 | 14 |
19 | 52 | 63 | 11 |
20 | 58 | 68 | 10 |
21 | 64 | 74 | 10 |
22 | 68 | 80 | 12 |
23 | 78 | 83 | 5 |
24 | 86 | 88 | 2 |
25 | 88 | 90 | 2 |
26 | 91 | 93 | 2 |
27 | 94 | 95 | 1 |
28 | 95 | 95 | 0 |
29 | 97 | 97 | 0 |
30 | 98 | 98 | 0 |
31 | 98 | 98 | 0 |
32 | 99 | 99 | 0 |
33 | 99 | 99 | 0 |
34 | 100 | 99 | -1 |
35 | 100 | 99 | -1 |
36 | 100 | 99 | -1 |
The visualization of the student numbers at each score shows how haphazard things are. Because of how the test is scored and scaled, certain scores dominate the results. Among the various form codes, almost 1 in 10 test takers ended up with 23 and another 8% at 24. These happen to be common scores when high Composite scoring students complain about “low” Writing scores. The low- to mid-20s is not that out of character for a 30+ student.
Will colleges use ACT’s concordance or calculate the average domain score? Will the results always be the same?
By trying to give a variety of ways of thinking about Writing scores, ACT seems to be confusing matters more in its “5 Ways to Compare 2015–2016 and 2016–2017 ACT Writing Scores” white paper. If there are so many ways to compare scores, which one is right? Which one will colleges use? Why don’t they all give the same result?
Most students are familiar with the concept that different raw scores on the English, Math, Reading, or Science tests can produce different scaled scores. The equating of forms can smooth out any differences in difficulty from test date to test date. When ACT introduced scaling to the Writing test, it opened up the same opportunity. In fact, we have seen that the same raw score (8-48) on one test can give a different result on another test. Not all prompts behave in the same way, just as not all multiple-choice items behave in the same way. This poses a problem, though, when things are reversed. Suddenly ACT is saying to “ignore all that scaling nonsense and just trust our readers.” Trusting the readers helped get ACT into this mess, and ignoring the scaling is hard to do when an estimated one million students have already provided scaled Writing scores to colleges.
Because of the peculiarities of scaling and concordances, the comparison methods that ACT suggests of calculating a new 2-12 score from an old score report versus using a concordance table can produce differing results.
On the April 2016 ACT, a student with reader scores of {4, 3, 4, 3} and {4, 4, 4, 3} would have a raw score of 29 and would have received a scaled score of 21. In order to compare that score to the “new” score range, we could simply take the rounded average of the domain scores and get 7 (29/4 = 7.25).
An alternative provided by ACT is to use the concordance table (see below). We could look up the 21 scaled score the student received and find that it concords to a score of 8.
Same student, same test, same reader scores, different result. Here is where percentiles can give false readings, again. The difference between a 7 and an 8 is the difference between 59th percentile and 84th percentile. That’s a distressing change for a student who already thought she knew exactly where she had scored.
It would seem as if directly calculating the new 2-12 average would be the superior route, but this neglects to account for the fact that some prompts are “easier” than others — the whole reason the April scaling was a little bit different than the scaling in September or December. There is no psychometrically perfect solution; reverting to a raw scale has certain trade-offs. We can’t unring the bell curve.
Below is the concordance that ACT provides to translate from 1-36 scaled scores to 2-12 average domain scores.
Scaled 1-36 Score | Concorded 2-12 Score |
---|---|
1 | 2 |
2 | 2 |
3 | 2 |
4 | 3 |
5 | 3 |
6 | 3 |
7 | 3 |
8 | 4 |
9 | 4 |
10 | 4 |
11 | 5 |
12 | 5 |
13 | 5 |
14 | 6 |
15 | 6 |
16 | 6 |
17 | 6 |
18 | 7 |
19 | 7 |
20 | 7 |
21 | 8 |
22 | 8 |
23 | 8 |
24 | 8 |
25 | 9 |
26 | 9 |
27 | 9 |
28 | 10 |
29 | 10 |
30 | 10 |
31 | 11 |
32 | 11 |
33 | 11 |
34 | 12 |
35 | 12 |
36 | 12 |
Will I still be able to superscore? What will colleges do?
Students faced with great composite scores and weak essay scores have faced a re-testing dilemma. Many have hoped that more colleges would announce superscoring of Writing scores. Unfortunately, the scoring change does nothing to alleviate the dilemma. By making it even harder for colleges to have a uniform set of scores in its files, the new reporting decreases the likelihood that Writing scores from 2015-2016 will be superscored with those from 2016-2017. Would colleges superscore the rounded, domain average? The concorded score? What ACT has effectively precluded them from doing is using the 1-36 scale as the benchmark for all scores. In the long-run the demise of the 1-36 essay score is a good thing. In the short-run, it leaves the class of 2017 with even more headaches.
Will I still be able to get my test rescored?
ACT has not announced any changes to its rescoring policy. You can request a rescore of your essay within 3 months of your test date for a $50 fee. The fee is refunded if your score is changed. Scores will never be lowered due to a rescore.
ACT almost certainly took note of the increased requests it was receiving for rescores and the increased number of refunds it was issuing for changed scores. The shift to 2-12 scoring makes it somewhat less likely that a rescore will result in a change (fewer buckets). Students can work with their school counselor to obtain a copy of their essay and decide if a rescore is merited.
Is this even about college admission?
Not really, but ACT won’t admit it. Less than 15% of colleges will require ACT Writing from the class of 2017; most put little weight on it; and the nature of Writing scores means that the distinctions between applicants rarely have meaning.
The real target is the state and district consumer. The difference between a 7 and an 8 might not indicate much about an individual student, but if one large high school in your district averages 7.2 and another averages 7.8, the difference is significant. Domain scores may be able to tell state departments of education how their teachers and students are performing in in different curricular areas. Increasingly, states and districts are paying for students to take the ACT (or SAT) in order to make all students “college ready” or to fulfill testing mandates. ACT and College Board view this as a growth opportunity that potentially extends across all of K-12.
The school and district consumers care more about converting scores because the longitudinal data matters. They want to be able to compare performance over time and need a common measuring stick.
The sudden introduction of the new scaling in September 2015 and the sudden reversal for September 2016 has undercut the credibility of a test that colleges had already viewed dubiously. For two classes in a row admission offices have had to interpret two different sets of scores from the same students. They will be facing the third type of Writing score before they had a chance to adjust to the second. We expect colleges to trust the ACT Composite and test scores that they have used for decades and to take a wait-and-see attitude toward essay scores.
Art,
Thanks for the article!
Do you happen to know, (or can refer me to a link) of where I can find the number of perfect scorers on the writing section alone. I took the ACT September 2015 and was wondering how many people got the perfect 36.
thanks!
Anon,
You’re welcome. ACT has not published those figures. The closest thing we have is when they produced the percentiles for each score, but those were based on study group data. Suffice it to say that a 36 is in the 99+ percentile.
Hi. Thanks for sharing this information. My grandson scared a composite of 28 on the ACT the first time. His math was the lowest and I don’t know the score. He scored 10 on the writing test. Any comments?
Don,
If your grandson took the in Sept 2016 or later, then his essay score is excellent. Very few students are awarded 11s or 12s, so he is in great shape. If he took the ACT between Sept ’15 and before Sept ’16, then his 10 is on the 1-36 scale and his score would be quite weak. I’m guessing that he is a recent tester.
While applying for MIT through slideroom, the form has columns to report scores of ACT/English, ACT Eng/Writing and ACT/Writing beside other scores. My ACT score available today is for English, Maths, Reading, Science, Writing, English Language Arts (ELA) and STEM. My doubt is which value to report to MIT form against the column of ACT Eng/Writing from the ACT score ?
Valay,
The ELA score has basically replaced the English/Writing score as a blended measure of “verbal” performance. That’s the score I’d report. MIT also has a great admission office, so I’d encourage you to give them a call or email. ACT’s zigs and zags with essay scores have left many college applications outdated. The admission offices usually work it out, although I know why it is stressful for students.
Read somewhere in MIT’s Blog
“When filling out the self-reporting testing in Part 2 of the application, know that we are aware that scores from the new ACT (beginning with the October administration) no longer include an English+Writing (E+W) score. You do not need to list an E+W score. When listing your writing score, do so in the Writing field. If you’ve taken both the old and new ACT, simply list the writing score that you’re most proud of; we are well aware that these are marked on different point scales. Remember, this is only self-reported scoring, we will use official scores in review”.
Thank you, Valay! As I mentioned, MIT has an excellent admission office. Glad that they are not only on top of this but have already blogged about it.
Hi Mr. Sawyer, Thank you for taking the time to answer all these questions. I certainly gain a lot from reading your response. My daughter scored ACT composite score of 33 (E35/M32/R34/S31) with a Writing score of 10, and her SAT score is 1460 (E700/M760) with an essay score of 6/6/7. They seem to be very equal, or do you see which score might be better for non-science majors? And given this is her first time taking both tests, which test should she retake, if any?
Dad,
You are right that her scores are similar. I wouldn’t even be worrying about the essay scores given their limited import and her good scores. The subject splits are what jump out at me. She did much better on E/R than M/S on the ACT, but did better on Math on the SAT. I could argue this many ways. If she feels her strengths are the verbal skills, then raising her SAT might be easier. Even if her M score drops, she’d be in good shape at colleges that superscore. On the other hand, her ACT is starting off a bit stronger. When I discuss this choice with students, it often boils down to preference. Why does she feel she did better on different sections of the two tests? Which one does she feel like, “If only I had a second swing…” ACT Science can be one of the trickier areas to bring up, whereas she clearly has the skills to improve her ERW on the SAT. Sometimes when scores are close, the decision can boil down to which test dates work better for her — time of the year, conflicts with other activities, conflicts with Subject Tests. The best thing to do is to make a decision and dig in. As for whether she should retest at all, that depends on where she has her sights set. For admission to the most selective colleges in the country, she could still improve where she stands and she has plenty of time.
Can you speak about scores vs GPA and how schools see that? For instance 35 ACT with 8 Essay (36 Superscore – taken twice only). Math subject 2 = 790. GPA at end of Jr. Year will be about 4.0 weighted – 3.8 unweighted.
What are realistic schools and how do colleges see this.
Leslie,
Compass’ expertise is in admission testing rather than college admissions, so I try to refrain from recommendations better made by a college counselor. I can say that your “testing portfolio” is excellent. You may want to add at least a second Subject Test to meet the requirements at certain colleges. Subject Tests can also be a good way to demonstrate your academic achievements even when they are not explicitly required. Grades, though, will always have the largest impact on admission chances. I recommend discussing target colleges with your counselor. Your scores certainly will not hold you back!
Hello,
Your article is very informative on a matter so minimally understood. I know more now than the ACT website ever could supply me. However, there is a definite tone of disapproval of the ACT’s methods. I am a student applying to top universities (UPenn, Princeton, Columbia, etc.). I took the February ACT of 2017 plus writing. After just getting my scores back, I have received a 12 (out of 12) on the ACT writing portion. Will this be ignored by the aforementioned top colleges? Or will it benefit me?
Thank you for your consideration,
Cyrus
Cyrus,
You are correct about my tone, but that is not to say that your 12 will be meaningless. Most colleges have chosen not to use Writing, but it is still a component at some top colleges such as Princeton. Even at a number of the Writing-optional colleges, admissions officers will see your essay score as an added element of your testing portfolio (colleges have often been coy about their policies here). Some colleges have explicitly said that they will not even look at Writing scores. In those cases, you’ll just be left with the pride in a job well done.
Hello!
I recently received a 35 Composite, 36 E, 35 M, 35 M, but a 32 S!
I am obviously really happy with my score, but I keep hearing a little voice that the 32 in Science will hurt my chances at top schools. My #1 choice is Stanford, which superscores and they would see my 33 in Science from last December. But my question is do you think that at other top schools that don’t superscore my 32 would put me at a disadvantage?
Thanks!!
Jimmy,
The trite answer is that your 32 will not be as advantageous as a 35 or 36 but not as disadvantageous as a 28. Will it bar you from admission? Absolutely not! You’ve got a 35 composite — an impressive score. Most students have a section or two on which they are weaker. I wouldn’t worry about it.
Hello,
I have read your blogpost and the comments and I am still somewhat confused. My son took the ACT last month and received a composite score of 36. He just got his essay results back with scores of 8/7/8/8. I think what I am hearing is that, based on his composite score, he should NOT retake the ACT in order to improve his writing score? Thank you for your time and expertise.
Sarah,
Correct. He should not retake the ACT in order to improve his writing score. His 8 average is not atypical for students at even the most selective colleges, whereas his 36 puts him in a pretty elite group. There is too strong of a chance that he get a lower Composite on a retake, and few colleges give the essay weight.
I need some advice about my daughter. She took the ACT in February 2016 as a 7th grade enrolled in the Duke TIP program. Her composite was a 28 (Reading 34, English 30, Science 27, Math 21). She took it again this February 2017 as an 8th grader. We wanted her to have exposure to the ACT Writing. She scored a 32 Composite (English 36, Reading 35, Science 30, Math 26 [She left 8 blank; she knows this was a horrible mistake]). Her writing score was a 9. Her goal is to be accepted into an Ivy League school. We both realize that she needs to improve her scores, but does it matter how many times she takes the ACT? I know that there is a limit of 12 attempts, but I also realize that she doesn’t need to necessarily test 12 times. Also, how many times would she need to retake the writing portion?
Lisa,
My strong recommendation would be for your daughter to take a break from official administrations. Her scores are impressive for a 9th grader, but she’ll improve with time (you can see the jump she made in Math, which is particularly dependent on coursework). There are also many practice ACT’s available for her to take on her own. No, there is not a perfect way of getting a writing score from these exams, but if she is already at a 9, that’s not much of an issue. She does not need to report her 8th and 9th grade ACTs to colleges, but things get more complicated from now on. Schools that require all tests will expect all of her sophomore scores. This can be a disadvantage at some of the Ivy League schools (it also costs more, since each school report for each date needs to be sent individually). I usually recommend that students start testing no earlier than fall of junior year (ACT is also adding a summer date that will be available). An advanced student will have covered all of the math on the exam and will also have gained a certain testing maturity. Yes, I see sophomores with 35s and 36s occasionally, but they are the exception. A student making good decisions about timing and preparation should not need to take the test more than 3 times.
There are some colleges (University of California is the largest) where a student must have Writing with any test she wants considered. I can make a wish (unlikely to be fulfilled) that colleges will have dropped the essay by the time your daughter applies. Plan on her taking the test 2-3 times and take the essay on each administration unless it becomes clear that her target colleges will not be using it.
Hello,
I’m wondering what colleges will make of an outlier ACT subtest score? On the recent ACT my child scored:
E 31; M35; R25; and S32 with writing 10. ELA 28; STEM 34 and Composite 31 Emerging from the test he reported he was able to finish 3 of the 4 reading sections. He’s interested in a STEM major – looking mostly at medium-sized LAC. Not sure whether to switch to the SAT or plug along with the ACT? Any advice very much appreciated.
Ted,
It’s not uncommon for ACT students to get bogged down on Reading or Science and find that they can’t get to all of the passages. Time management is a skill that comes into play and is one that can be practiced and improved. I don’t think that the Reading score is enough of a reason to abandon the ACT. I would recommend a) taking an officially released practice ACT to see if he repeatedly has problem with the Reading or whether it was just a bad mix of passages on a bad day for him. The second step is to take an officially released practice SAT. There is no reason to consider switch to the SAT if he shows the same sort of symptoms as on the ACT. Even if he is already a junior (the most likely situation), he still has options this spring and fall. He will want to make a decision quickly, however, so that he can use his prep time effectively.
Art,
You are so incredibly helpful and knowledgable. Thank you in advance for your reply.
My son scored a 33 on his first act with an 8 on the essay – he scored a 36 on his second act with a 7 on the essay. At the advice of his guidance counselor he was told not to bother retesting to try to raise the writing score. That being said, the 7-8 is such a difference in percentage on the scale and my son is applying to some elite colleges, should he submit both scores so that admissions can see his ability to at least get the 8 (which we realize is still not great comparably to his composite). Keep in mind, his 33 was only brought down by his reading score which was an anomaly at a 30, he missed a passage…
Thank you for any advice you can offer as to whether he should submit both sittings or just the 36/7.
Cayin,
I’m sorry for being so delayed in my response — especially after you said such nice things! I agree 100% with your son’s guidance counselor. Your son deserves to celebrate a truly wonderful score and not look back. It’s easy to be unnerved by percentiles on the Writing test, but it’s simply not a valid enough exam to parse things closely. Percentiles describe score distribution, but they don’t reflect levels of achievement. When applying to a superscoring college, I see no downside to submitting his 33/8, but it is unlikely to have an impact. I would not recommend sending the 33 to colleges that do not superscore.
Hello. I am retaking the ACT next month and have already taken it once along with the writing section. I scored extremely well on the writing section so I am not retaking that section. When applying to schools that require the writing score, will those schools receive all of my ACT test scores or will they only receive the score for the test where I completed the writing section?
Linda,
There is not universal agreement at colleges on this point. Most schools have stated that all scores will be considered as long as the student has at least one Writing score. The University of California system is a notable exception, since they expect all scores — including Writing — to come from a single administration. You will probably be OK not taking Writing, but I’m a believer that there is little downside to taking it again for absolute security.
I received a 35 composite on the ACT but got a 6 on the writing. I took the SAT and received a 1440 with a 15 on writing and a 1350 with an 18. I am very worried about the 6 as it is a large outlier. Should I retake the ACT to better the writing score. I have seen what you said before but those people were getting 7s 8s and 9s.
Anon,
A 35 is a fabulous score. You are correct, though, that a 6 is lower than what we’d normally see at the most competitive colleges. Your ACT performance is considerably better than your SAT score, so I would focus on the ACT. Repeat or sit tight? I don’t like to advise repeat testing only because of Writing, but it might make sense in your case. If you are primarily applying to colleges that do not require Writing, then I’d stick with your 35. Yes, they’ll see your score. Most will ignore it entirely, and few would give it much weight. Otherwise, I feel like you may be more confident about your testing portfolio if you can raise your Writing score at least 2-3 points. It has to be a decision with which you are comfortable.
Hi Art,
I received a 36 composite on the April ACT but got a 7 on the writing. This is my first time taking ACT. I’m aiming for top schools. Should I retake the ACT to get a better writing score? Thanks!
Qing,
Congratulations on your score. I would recommend against retaking the test. Your writing score will play such a small role, it is not far out of the norm (8-10 at top colleges) and there could be a negative in showing a lower score to schools that require you to report all ACT scores.
Mr. Sawyer,
I’m a Junior in high school, and I took the ACT in April. I received a 31 composite including 36 in English and 30 in Reading. While this isn’t perfection, it’s a score I’m comfortable with. However, my Writing score was 21. Needless to say, I was surprised as writing is a strong point of mine, and I have never gotten lower than an A on any English class. Does this hurt my chances of gettting into a public state school? What about a private school like, say, Baylor(I live in Texas)? Should I retest just to improve my writing score?
Matt,
I’m a little confused. If you are talking about the April 2017 ACT, then your Writing score should be from 2-12. Perhaps you are talking about the ELA score that blends English, Reading, and Writing to get a 1-36 score (you can see our post about interpreting your score report. If you got a 36 English, 30 Reading, and a 21 ELA, your Writing score would have to be very low (I’m not even sure it would be possible). That’s why I may need more information. If you took the April 2016 test when ACT was using the 1-36 scale for Writing, then I wouldn’t be concerned. While it’s not a great score for someone with your skills, it’s not uncommon, and should not pose a problem.
As you probably read in my post, ACT used to use a DIFFERENT 2-12 score prior to September 2015. I only bring that up because scores tend to not be that different than on the new 2-12 scale and there is college admission data for the older scores. For example, Baylor’s 25th to 75th percentile scores were 7 to 8 with a mean of 7.9. If your Writing score is 7 or above, I would advise you that it’s good enough and that your Composite score is *far* more important. If you received a 6 or less with your scores, I’d at least consider retesting. I believe in retesting only if a) your Writing score is well below a school’s range b) you are applying to schools that actually care about Writing and, critically c) you believe that a retest will not lower your Composite.
My son gets extra time for testing. Even with extra time, he did not finish the science or even start the writing portion of the ACT. He scored 36 for math, 31 for English, and 32 for Reading. None of the schools he is applying to require the writing portion, so we were wondering what it will look like to them to see no score for writing. He is taking it again, but was not going to take the writing unless it will look really bad as a no score on his previous test. What do you think?
Mom,
Some colleges will not even look at the Writing score, whereas others will consider it if it is submitted. Since your son was signed up for the Writing portion, sending his scores would be considered “submitting” Writing (ACT provides no option to suppress the Writing score). It may at least cause some head-scratching on the part of admission offices. I don’t think the decision as to whether or not to take Writing on a retest should be influenced by this “missing” score. It sounds like skipping Writing is the correct decision for your son and is more likely to lead to a welcome outcome (and may also cause less dread). Keep in mind that (assuming he gets National Extended Time), his testing time will be reduced from 6 hours to 5 hours if he takes the ACT w/o Writing. He will need to budget his time accordingly.
Mr Sawyer,
I received a 33 Composite score on my April ACT this year. I took this test WITHOUT the Writing Section. Today, I took the ACT again but WITH the Writing Section. Is there a way I can use my April ACT Composite score and just take the Writing Section score from this June test? I have no interest in mixing/super-scoring any other parts of my score. I just want to use the Writing Section score.
Please let me know!
Thanks!
Natalie,
Unfortunately, using your Writing score alone is not possible. If a college requires Writing or if you want to show off your Writing skills with a strong essay, you will need to submit your complete June results. Some colleges will combine this with your April ACT, but that’s their choice, not yours.
Hi, Mr. Sawyer,
My son took ACT this May and got 36 in every category. Unfortunately his essay is only 9. He will be junior this fall and our state requests them to take SAT in April of junior year (April of 2018). If his SAT writing is better but overall score is worse, which score should we send? In addition to Univ. of Michigan (outside our door), he will only consider top 15 schools…
Thanks.
Jay,
Congratulations to your son. That’s an amazing score for anyone, but particularly a sophomore. His 9 is fine. I don’t know if the state of MI imposes any penalty for not listening to their SAT request. I don’t want to encourage truancy, so all I’ll say is that — if it were me — I’d probably be out sick the day of the SAT. There is almost nothing to be gained. He could get a 1600 and an 8/8/8 essay, but I doubt it would improve his testing portfolio by more than a hair. And there is always the possibility that he will not do as well on the SAT. I would definitely not recommend sending a lower SAT score simply because he did well on the SAT Essay.
He is in fabulous shape. I would concentrate on Subject Tests (and grades, of course). I would like to suggest that he at least consider schools outside the top 15 (if we could really agree on what top 15 means). Admission decisions are not always predictable. In your son’s case, Michigan may be so much of a lock that you consider it his safety school.
Hi, Art,
Thanks for your suggestion. He already took three SAT II this year (Math II, Chem, and US History) and got all three 800 🙂
Yes, Univ Michigan is kind of safety school. If necessary, I guess Michigan State as well…
Jay
Art:
I had emailed before – my daughter got a 36 on the ACT with an essay score of 9. She did not retest per your advice :). But she did take the SAT in August to get a qualifying score for National Merit. She got a 1590/1600 and the essay total was 22/24.
My question this time is this — we had planned to send her ACT scores to all her schools (several ivies and other great state schools). Should we also send her SAT scores? Would it show strength in knowledge and also a strong essay score — OR have the schools seen enough testing and this would be too much? In other words, would it hurt her application?
Her guidance counselor says she “could” send them but doesn’t feel strongly one way or the other.
She has other strong test scores in subject tests and APs.
Thanks!
Send them! Send them all! Seriously, there is no reason for a student who has done so well to feel the need to edit her portfolio. Will the 1590 make a difference on top of her 36? Probably not, but it would never hurt her. The strong essay is a nice added benefit.
Art:
Just re-reading the other questions and answers — your last answer to another question says “I would definitely not recommend sending a lower SAT score simply because he did well on the SAT Essay” —- is that would you would say in my daughter’s situation as well?
She got 800s on 4 subject tests and 5s on 4 APs.
Thanks again!
ACT mom,
If I read your original comment correctly (1590), the “lower SAT score” part wouldn’t apply here. I don’t see a reason to withhold her SAT score.
Thank you Art! I appreciate your prompt response! We will send all the scores.
Hello Art,
I received a 34 composite but a 7 on the writing. Altogether, my writing score averaged a 7.25. Because the scorers did not agree and I received an odd number score, is it likely that there was a discrepancy in the scoring? Would requesting a score verification be worth it?
Although I have a 34, I worry that because my writing score does not fit within the 8+ range, I may not qualify for certain merit scholarships. Does the ACT writing score impact merit scholarships?
Concerned,
My apologies for the late reply. A score verification is not worth it. ACT no longer rescores essays. Instead, the “verification” process is basically just a double-check that your essay was not accidentally read by Martians. It’s not uncommon for readers to give differing scores. I wouldn’t be that concerned about your 7. While I can’t say that the writing score will have no impact on any scholarships, I can say that few colleges place admission emphasis on the essay, and fewer still care about it for scholarships.
So I’m filling out applications at the moment, and I’m confused on how to answer the ACT writing section. I got a 9 on the writing, but many online applications appear to still use the old 1-36 scoring system. (The Common Application, PennState, ect.. ) And I’m wondering what to do. Do I report a 9 out of 36 or is there some conversion?
Julia,
Common App has done a poor job of explaining this to students. We checked with them and with colleges and the recommendation is to simply put in your score (9). So while the dropdown might be 1-36, colleges know from your test date and your score that it is actually on the 2-12 scale.