<p>So during break, I was just playing around with my friend. I saw something sticking out of his pocket so I reached and snatched it out, put it in my pocket, and said "this looks like something important." But he didn't really care. He said "I don't care, you can have it." So I got curious and took the paper out of my pocket and opened it up. It was a list of all the Supreme Court cases and their significances. Of course, convinently, that's when the proctor comes by and decides that she will write a report saying I was "holding and reading a list of all the Supreme Court cases and their significances." I really think I did well on this test and I'm just ****ed about the situation. What should I do? Is there anything I should do?</p>
<p>Ouch, that’s too bad. If he wrote a report then you have very little chance of getting your grade for that one. I don’t want to sound negative, but your test will most likely be invalidated. I isolated myself from everyone else while taking the test to eliminate any chance of having anything like that happening to me. Sorry about that.</p>
<p>Did they let you finish the test? If so, and unless someone has a picture of you holding the paper or the paper with your fingerprints on it, deny, deny, deny.</p>
<p>They did let me finish the test but they did staple the list i was holding behind their irregularity notification. I’m really mad right now because the proctor didn’t even tell us the right time to stop the MC portion of the test. She posted on the wall that we were suppose to stop working on the test at 8:54 but she stopped us at 8:46, saying that she was going by her cell phone time, not the giant school clock that everyone was looking at throughout the test. But of course they didn’t include this “irregularity” on their notification. Ahh I’m mad.</p>
<p>That really sucks, but there were only like 3 cases you needed on the whole test and they were really common ones, so you should just be like it was of no use to me anyway.</p>
<p>Well, all you can do now is wait to see what the score report says. It won’t do you any good to beat yourself up about it because you can’t change what happened, even though it was an accident. If it comes back invalidated, just accept it and move on with life. If it comes back with a score on it, celebrate because you got freakin’ lucky.</p>