Non-Saturday Testing?

<p>I'm currently trying to register for the April 4 exam, but I have a huge conflict that I'd really rather not skip but might end up having to. I want to register for the April 5 Sunday test at a nearby private Jewish high school. I am Jewish, so it wouldn't be a completely outrageous idea, however I am not nearly religious enough to actually say I keep the Saturday sabbath holy. Is this actually a feasible option? Or do I need to show some kind of proof when I register that I am religious? If so, I could probably do that, but I would feel kind of guilty about it :(</p>

<p>Anyone with experience in this department? Or just general advice?</p>

<p>
[quote]
Registering for the First Time
If this is the first time you are registering for Sunday testing, you must: </p>

<p>Fill out a paper Registration Form. Make sure that you fill in 01000 for the test center code. Leave the second choice blank.
Include a written and signed explanation from your clergy on letterhead, with your Registration Form.
Mail the registration, with proper payment and clergy letter, by the regular registration postmark deadline. International registrations must arrive by the registration deadline.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>SAT</a> Sunday Testing</p>

<p>Thank you for the reply, but that is for SAT testing, I'm talking about ACT testing. I have looked through the web site and have not found anything saying I need evidencee of some sort.</p>

<p>I don't know if it matters to you, but you might also want to find out if whether once you apply for Sunday testing, you must take all subsequent tests on Sundays as well.</p>

<p>This is the page I'm primarily looking at.</p>

<p>ACT</a> FAQ : Is non-Saturday testing available?</p>

<p>I'm having trouble interpreting this sentence, "If you try to test standby (in the U.S. or Canada only) or make a test center change to a Sunday or Monday test center, you must bring a letter from your cleric or a notarized statement to verify your religious beliefs prohibit Saturday testing."</p>

<p>Does that mean that you ONLY need a letter IF you are testing standby or are CHANGING to a non-Saturday test? Or does that mean that no matter what, when you register for a non-saturday test, you must have a letter?</p>

<p>Needaname, if that is the case I would not mind taking more Sunday tests in the future in order to avoid this one conflict. In case it matters, I did take the December test and I took it on a Saturday.</p>

<p>Oh. Sorry. If I'm reading these right, you don't need any proof if you're taking a scheduled Sunday test, but if you are asking them to schedule one then you need a letter.</p>

<p>ACT</a> FAQ : Is non-Saturday testing available?</p>

<p><a href="http://www.act.org/aap/pdf/arranged.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.act.org/aap/pdf/arranged.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Ok cool, I'm going to clear it with my counselor and then register. Thank you for a second opinion on that sentence lol</p>

<p>if anyone out there reads this differently, or has had an experience with non-saturday testing, post please!</p>