<p>theres no excuse for that.
i dont know if you can, but i think you should keep your chemistry score and retake the physics. and that school should be notified of their inept proctor.</p>
<p>I dont get it... you posted this yesterday(friday). do you live in europe or something?</p>
<p>and on the testing situation conversation: i sat in the back corner next to the teacher's refridgerator... it looked like it was about 30 years old. i guess the thing needed to get colder so it turned on and started humming... i was taking the reading section so i leaned over and yanked the plug out of the wall... ahah sucker.</p>
<p>i'd be so ****ed, make sure you kill the proctor, or atleast complain.</p>
<p>
[quote]
make sure you kill the proctor
[/quote]
</p>
<p>rofl...........</p>
<p>I live in South East Asia. GMT +7:00</p>
<p>I thought Collegeboard call center is not open till monday?</p>
<p>Something somewhat similar to that happen to me this morning, although it wasn't as severe.</p>
<p>For some reason, our proctor decided it was a good idea to use his own watch to time the 25 minutes for the essay. His watch just happened to be 4 minutes off from the clock in the room. Long story short, I didn't finish my essay. I had only written half a conconclusion.</p>
<p>I want you to know that a similar situation happened to me last year. It was only a few minutes and the proctors let us have the few minutes, but it still affected our scores. I hope everything works out for you.</p>
<p>After the test was over, our proctor said he was going to file a disturbance report in regards to the time discrepency. Hopefully readers are understanding. If I knew I was running out of time, I would have picked up my pace, just like everyone else. It just angers me that my essay was left hanging. Whatever, at least it only affected the essay section.</p>