Almost as bad as forgetting my name...

<p>Remember the Certification Statement on the back of the test? The "I will not cheat..." same old stuff. Apparently, that had to be in cursive, and I think my proctor was the only one that forgot to mention that. I know, it was in the directions, but I didn't know that "not cursive" was called "print." Anyone have any advice and/or similar stories that ended up working out?</p>

<p>It doesn't matter, I just write it however I feel like, and none of my scores have been cancelled.... then again, I write so crappily, all my writing could be cursive...</p>

<p>it wont matter. at all.</p>

<p>i usually dont even write it and end up writing scribbles by the end</p>

<p>my proctor didnt mention it either, i doubt its too significant.</p>

<p>ahha ya dont worry about it</p>

<p>I get a chuckle out of the kids who sit there for 10 minutes trying to write it in perfect cursive as if they are being graded on it</p>

<p>no worries</p>

<p>That thing only comes into play if you are expected of cheating or something else (I guess?). It has never mattered before. I hope you didn't cheat!</p>

<p>the only reason I can think of for why they want it in cursive would be for handwriting analysis (easier to see/analyze slants) if you're suspected of cheating and they want to compare your signature to your written statement...</p>

<p>I doubt it matters. I remember when I took the SAT and they announced that, half the class (including me) groaned and started struggling to remember how to write anything but our signatures in cursive.</p>

<p>I should have thought to do what IOwned did and just have it slowly descend into scribbles.</p>

<p>It doesn't matter. At all. I never write in cursive, and I think I even wrote the sentence incorrectly once (I accidentally mixed up the words because I didn't care) and my scores were never canceled.</p>