<p>At the start of the English section, I had to erase an answer choice when I figured out it was not correct. When I erased it, a huge ass smuggle mark appeared and it stretched about three answers. I tried erasing it as well as I can, but it only turned into a light-grayish color. :(</p>
<p>I erased like 5-6 answers during the test and none of them completely went away.</p>
<p>That happened to me at least once in each section.</p>
<p>Hopefully the machines grading it can tell the difference. No worries though, because I’m sure they can.</p>
<p>Yeah, I was also kinda worried because I erased a few answers.</p>
<p>This is COMPLETELY unrelated- but did yall put society as a whole or just no change- more!</p>
<p>I put society as a whole. The “more!” did not fit in with the tone of the passage and just did not seem to work.</p>
<p>@biggie I put society as a whole because it sounds better and gives a clear meaning to who they affected.</p>
<p>I dunno that “society as a whole” thing didn’t work when I placed it in.</p>
<p>“Society as a whole” worked in context perfectly when I tried it. The “more!” just sounded ridiculous and not acceptable in the context of the passage.</p>
<p>Ah well, The english on this one was a bit different from the practice tests I took. I’m looking at minus 5. guessing 32 on a hard scale, 34 on lenient for this subsect.</p>
<p>Do you guys think that ACT has graders check our answer sheet? I highly doubt they do, but on the other hand I’d be surprised if they didn’t because of the ambiguity of some marks and potential machine failure/inaccuracy.</p>
<p>I mean, nearly all of my teachers check our MC answer sheets before they hand them back for that same reason.</p>
<p>For $40 you can have someone at the ACT hand score your bubble sheet. It’s a steep price but if you really messed your bubble sheet up it may be worth it. Or, you could just pay $50 and re-take it.</p>