<p>My scores were canceled. What will my University do when they find out? Will I get kicked out or is anything going to happen?</p>
<p>Were everyone’s scores cancelled, or just yours? Sometimes, a whole test site’s scores are cancelled due to an irregularity, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that a particular individual cheated, or anything.</p>
<p>To answer your questions, no and no. The only consequence is you don’t have that score.</p>
<p>Can colleges cancel scholarship based on the cancelled score, even if it was cancelled due to no fault of your own or will college still honor scholarship/ ACT if its already been awarded and applied to your award package?</p>
<p>If you are talking about a cancellation that occurred before test scores were released, then nothing happens because ACT does not send anything to a college; it is as if you never took the test.</p>
<p>If you are talking about a cancellation that occurs after test scores have been released to colleges, then ACT sends a notice to the colleges that the scores have been cancelled and should not be used for any purpose (which would include for scholarship purposes). The only time I ever heard of ACT scores being cancelled after test scores were released (other than a cancellation requested by a test-taker himself) is after discovery of the Perry County, Kentucky scandal in late 2010. Kentucky includes the ACT as part of its annual student testing done to comply with no child left behind laws and ACT discovered in late 2010 that proctors at the Perry County test locations, who were teachers or administrators for the county high schools, were actually changing test answers to get higher scores or telling students answers. In that situation ACT informed the students that tests were cancelled and they were allowed to retake and colleges to which the tests were already sent were informed of the cancellation The colleges were also made aware of ACTs press release which stated its belief that the cancellation was caused by the administration of the test and not because of actions of the test-takers</p>