Ohhhh shooot shippy sha sha sha shucks. Wanna help?

<p>Hi! Well, I recently took the SAT IIs.</p>

<p>I was in a Youth Leadership Program, and I had to leave in the middle of it and go to another city in order to take the tests. I had never been to the city before, and I had to drive there myself, and I don't drive often--- I was just confused the entire day.</p>

<p>Well, I sat down and took the tests, and just ZONED OUT completely. I was deprived of sleep because of the program I was participating in --- DRAINING! </p>

<p>Additionally, I was taking the test completely out of my element since I was at a high school that I had never been to before, and I was about 100 miles away from my home. I was not comfortable at all.
Hmmm, I omitted about 7 on my US history and about 15 on my math. =X</p>

<p>And I was so unsure of everything, and the questions went just went right through me.</p>

<p>I am expecting like 500 - 650 or so on them. But you never know. I could've done a lot better than I would expect. I mean, what if I got 700 on one of them and 500 on the other? I honestly don't know, but I don't feel 100% comfortable with my performance. </p>

<p>But I don't want to waste my money.</p>

<p>Should I cancel my scores? </p>

<p>What would happen if I got 500 and 500 on both of them, and then retook them next year and got in the 700s? Would the colleges just ignore the 500s or look at it suspiciously? </p>

<p>Thanks for reading. I am severely long-winded.</p>

<p>What's the highest I can get on either subject tests, provided that I omit what I had mentioned before, and got a few wrong here and there?</p>

<p>I'm no expert on such things, but I know you're probably not alone in having skipped so many on math. You could probably still get above 600 on both, unless you feel like you really bombed the rest of the questions you answered as well.</p>

<p>And I know some colleges only look at the scores you send them, so if you retake and do better, just send those!</p>