<p>OK...so on question 2, they said to choose ONE of the court cases. Well, that somehow slipped right by me and I answered both of 'em.</p>
<p>Problem is, I know that I got one of the two wrong. And I'm not certain that I was 100% right on the other one either.</p>
<p>How will the graders be treating this?</p>
<p>My teacher says they grade the first one you write down.</p>
<p>^ This is not what my AP teacher says. He is an AP reader, so I trust him a lot.</p>
<p>They dont take points for what you get wrong, they only give you points for what you get right. So, if the first one you wrote was wrong, theyd just pass by it not giving any points, but then theyd read the 2nd one and give you points for that. Make sense?</p>
<p>They keep reading until you earn all the points. They'll just skip over the wrong one and give you credit for the other.</p>
<p>I heard that if it says to answer ONE question then you are supposed to answer ONE, or you get the whole thing wrong...</p>
<p>Thats totally incorrect. You can answer with as many as you want to get all the points.</p>