<p>I bet my counselor can't name any colleges outside the Big 10, Ivy League, and the State of Michigan. She doesn't even know my name, and she knows virtually nothing about the admissions process at any university higher than the U of M.</p>
<p>anyone else have this problem?</p>
<p>If thats your high schools policy then your guidance counselor is right. If all students have all of their test scores on their transcripts, she can't remove them for you. I dont know why you're worrying though, all colleges take your best scores.</p>
<p>how can it be a matter of "policy"? isn't there a law or something that says i have the right to remove them if i want</p>
<p>no. there isn't.</p>
<p>in fact, as stated above, in the midwest there's a law that says the opposite.</p>
<p>are you sure? how do you know?</p>
<p>Can't you just not list your HS when you sign up for the test? Then the HS won't have the score.</p>
<p>I think it makes you put your high school or else it doesn't consider it a complete registration.</p>
<p>If you can have the scores removed, don't bother to pick and choose- something may end up incorrect. I'd just wipe them all off of your transcript and rely on the official reports.</p>
<p>If that law that some are mentioning is real, it's a complete waste of taxpayer money. Why on earth should a school be required to send in all standardized test scores.</p>
<p>That is a retarded law.</p>
<p>Anyhow, I recently had all my SAT I/II scores removed from my transcript. I'm sure you can do the same, unless some law-maker decided to be a pain and create that pointless policy. That would be a different story.</p>