Predicament, hm........

<p>I HATE THE COLLEGE board. ( repost from one in GU forum, hope its ok)</p>

<p>ok, so i took my SAT 1's again. I just got the scores back ( lol) and I got a 600 on math....(?)</p>

<p>i knew somthing was fishy. So i called college board. I told them that I clearly told my proctor that i had some erasure ( spelling) marks on the paper, and to note that ( they were prominent). I also e-mailed collegebaord twice that there was this problem.</p>

<p>well, the person checks somthing, than told me "your paper did have marks, you should have payed to have it hand scored"</p>

<p>Now, i am very, very mad. I got a 660 on the reading, and got 700's on all the practice for math.....</p>

<p>well; now what- do i retake the SATs in october, or do i take the required SAT 2's? ( I already took 1- bio, gota 670)</p>

<p>thannks for all of the help</p>

<p>( gonna either apply to Northwestern or Georgetown ED/EA, both require SAT 2's)</p>

<p>it won't be too late to take the SAT IIs in november because the scores can be directly sent to your schools.
I'm applying early to Stanford, and I'm going to retake SAT Is in Oct., and take 2 more SAT IIs in Nov.</p>

<p>also.. is it too late to have your math hand scored? cause generally they can do it after scores are out.</p>

<p>1- collegeboard wont do that, i called</p>

<p>2- should i amke note of this on my app ( they did f up after all)</p>

<p>3- my counsler says that I should take the SAT 1. She told me that if you dont have your SAT 2s but apply early , you will still get the same recognition as someone who did take their SAT 2's</p>

<p>SHIZ</p>

<p>I thought you could take the SATs in october, and some colleges would let you take the SATIIs later than the app due date. Then you send those scores in later.</p>

<p>^^yeah, that's what I've heard/is what I'm doing</p>

<p>College Board's report on those scoring errors last year, which they were very reticient to report (took subpoenas to get it out of them) recognized 51 places where errors could occur. Many of which remained unresolved and of "high likelihood" ... Oh wait, that doesn't make you feel better.</p>

<p>Maybe a different standardized test to measure you will?
<a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=222016%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=222016&lt;/a>
no?
:&lt;/p>