<p>The College Board has lost the November 5 SAT Subject Tests taken by a student I have been tutoring. The exams of a few other students from his school were also lost. The CB at first delayed the score release but refused to give any reason for the delay. After being contacted by the guidance counselor, it confessed that the tests had not been found. The CB claims it is "looking for them". In the meantime my student's ED application remains without any subject test scores. </p>
<p>Does anyone have any suggestions? The family is considered legal action. Any recommendations for a lawyer who specializes in cases such as these?</p>
<p>First of all, there is no need to post two posts. </p>
<p>Give them a date in which they need to get back to that student and tell the student to explain that he has ED applications and he NEEDS subject test scores. (If he hasn’t done that already)</p>
<p>If CB really lost them, I can understand the despair the student might face, as some colleges need 2 subject tests to even apply.</p>
<p>See if you can settle with CB first. If they don’t offer you something that you like perhaps you can take legal action. Make sure it is worth it though.</p>
<p>I would demand the collegeboard contact the ED schools and explain that the delay is totally due them. </p>
<p>Really, the school isn’t going to only make the decision on whether to admit a student based on Subject test scores alone so this way, the college can go ahead and process everything. If the student has strong SAT scores, grades etc. the school should assume the scores are within range. It is the act of taking the subject tests that shows the dedication, the score is simply a check off.</p>