<p>Do they have the same cancellation policy as the SAT, like can you take the test and then cancel it if you didnt feel you did well that day or couple days after?</p>
<p>anyone know?</p>
<p>hello???? surely someone must know....</p>
<p>I'm sure there is, but what possible reason could you want to?</p>
<p>You already paid the money, and it might even cost more to cancel the exam score. And it is a score choice system, so you get to choose which scores get sent to colleges and which don't.</p>
<p>So there isn't really any reason to cancel your scores, unless you think you did really bad and you want save yourself the torture of looking at them. ;)</p>
<p>Well like I've already taken the SAT and I have an avg good score 2140, but I was thinking maybe I'd score insanely high on the ACT, lol.</p>
<p>Don't do it.</p>
<p>dont do it.... as in take the test or take it and cancel?</p>
<p>I think Martha meant cancel....</p>
<p>Again, there is really no reason. It can't hurt you in any way. You did good on the SAt's so see what u get ACT, and if it's lower just don't send it or take it again.</p>
<p>Yeah, I meant don't cancel.</p>
<p>The only reason you'd cancel is if you put down college choices when you registered and then, after testing, wanted to stop the scores from going to those colleges. You wouldn't really cancel, you'd just ask them to remove the college choices. The deadline for adding or removing college choices is noon central time the Thursday after the test.</p>
<p>If you aren't sure you're going to want your scores sent to colleges (or your high school, who might put it on your transcript), don't put any college codes (or your high school code) down when you register. Then, if you feel you did well, you can still add up to six college codes (four for free) and your high school code before noon Thursday. Or you can wait until after you get your scores and send score reports for $7 per school.</p>