Regents' Exam

<p>I am already stressing about the Regents' Exam. Do you take it after your freshman year in college? If you do not meet the requirement, can you retake it? If so, do they put you in remediation classes in the meantime? Also, up to how many times can you retake it? I plan on passing it the first time, but my weakness is multiple choice tests. I would do better in fill-in-the-blank questions. I do not do well when it comes to multiple choice reading questions especially.</p>

<p>Thanks in advance! :)</p>

<p>ha I wouldn't worry about it. You can exempt out of it by doing well on the placement tests at orientation (which are also nothing to worry about). </p>

<p>Bottom line, if you got into Georgia you probably won't have trouble with the Regents test.</p>

<p>Ah, that's great! That makes me worry less. :D</p>

<p>About the placement tests... if you do well on it, you are put in better classes, and if you do not do well, do they put you in remedial classes? And is it mandatory? I'm going to take it either way anyways.</p>

<p>Hi patel, when I go to Oasis to try to register for the Regents tests, it says Regents tests have been satisfied, no need to register. Is that true, or it's not time yet to register? By the way, how do you make the commitment deposit, online or write a check?</p>

<p>crisoliva, due to your SAT scores, I think they won't make you take the Reagent's Test. It tells me to sign up for it, but when I go to sign up for it, it tells me the deadline was already passed, so I will have to wait for the upcoming term to sign up. I think UGA accepts either a money order or a check via United States Postal Service. Then, you can go back to the application status page, where you had seen that you got accepted, and where it says "Commitment Deposit," it will say "Y" once received.</p>

<p>why do you struggle with multiple choice and find fill in’s better?</p>

<p>Placement tests can’t do any harm, only good! There’s no such thing as remedial classes at UGA. What comes from a placement test is exemption of a class. Say you took 3 years of Spanish in high school. You take a placement test to see which level to start in. Maybe you took calculus in high school but didn’t take it AP. You can take the math placement test to exempt the classes that contain information you already know.</p>