The Hillsdale Student Profile and What Preparation Looks Like
Hillsdale High School's International Baccalaureate program and its AP course offerings reflect a school that takes academic rigor seriously. Students in these tracks are used to extended essays, internal assessments, and demanding curriculum across multiple disciplines. The SAT and ACT ask for something different: speed, pattern recognition, and a specific kind of timed execution that IB and AP coursework do not specifically train.
Michael's diagnostic identifies where a Hillsdale student's gap is relative to their academic preparation. IB students, in particular, often have strong analytical skills that translate well to the evidence-based reading sections of the SAT, but may find the timing of the digital SAT's adaptive format requires specific adjustment. The ACT's time-per-question is tighter in some sections than the SAT, which is relevant for Hillsdale students who are deliberate thinkers.
The 2025 ACT changes (Science now optional, composite from four sections, approximately two hours) make the test worth reconsidering for Hillsdale students who previously avoided it. Michael assesses both tests during the free trial.
For Hillsdale families: Bay Area test centers near San Mateo fill 5 to 6 weeks before test day. Students should register on the first day the window opens. The College Board and ACT both publish specific test center information at collegeboard.org and act.org. Michael includes test date and registration guidance as part of the plan he presents after the trial session.