


Your college record will often include these scores. … from the SAT, ACT, GRE, or college admissions tests If a school psychologist performed the testing as part of an Individual Education Plan or Psycho-Education Evaluation, the school can provide a copy of that report signed by the school psychologist in either a sealed school envelope or as a notarized copy. Some districts charge a fee, usually in the $3 to $5 range, for copying records. If you’d like a copy of your records to keep for yourself, you’ll need to order two copies. Your records must arrive at the American Mensa office in an envelope sealed by the district, so have them provide you the records in a sealed envelope and then send that envelope, unopened, to American Mensa, or have the district send the records directly to American Mensa in the sealed envelope. Ask for the records or archives department, and then ask them how to obtain a copy of your complete school record with your test scores included. Call the administration office of the school district from which you graduated. Regardless of other schools or districts you may have attended, the district where you graduated should have your school record on file. … from your elementary, junior high, or high school If your state does not allow for document notarization, you may write a signed statement on the copy that says "this is a true, exact, unaltered copy of an original document." A notary will then be able to verify your signature on the document. The report needs to either be original or a notarized copy of the original. American Mensa will accept reports that are on doctor letterhead, signed by the doctor in ink with their license information included. The psychologist that administered your qualifying test should have provided you with a psychological report. You’ll also need to create an account and pay the score evaluation fee. Once you have your scores, send them to our office in an unopened envelope, or have them sent directly to: American Mensa Tracking down your test scores is fairly simple. If you’ve taken any of these tests in the past and scored in the top 2 percent, you don’t need to qualify again on another test. American Mensa accepts the results of about 200 standardized intelligence tests as qualifying evidence for membership.
