sat january big broblem I had

<p>in the test I accidentally marked the answers of section 5 in section 6 in the answer sheet. when I got aware of this problem,i erased the answers and copied them correctly
but the problem is that the answers I first rubbed still leaves a mark or a trace that an answer has been filled there
so is this ok or not
thanks</p>

<p>i made the same stupid mistake… and i always made fun of ppl who used to make it… the irony… But if you erased as thoroughly as possible and made sure to bubble as darkly as possible, then ur good… </p>

<p>I bet it won’t be a big deal… All we have to now is sit back wait, and pray to God in every prayer that it goes well… May God be on our side bro! :D</p>

<p>@2200andbeyondXD
it just happens u know ,I was lucky to find out before the time of the section was over. I hope someone who actually got his scores after doing this cheer us up :D</p>

<p>yeaaah… me too…</p>

<p>i did the same thing…but for two sections in a row before i noticed my mistake! I think i was able to recover and copy them correctly and erase everything as much as possible, but i’m still worried.</p>

<p>any help ?</p>

<p>You can call the College Board and ask that they hand score your test. It costs extra, but if you want to be absolutely sure the scoring machine didn’t pick up any mistakes, it might be a good idea.</p>

<p>if u are sure u messed up THAT BAD … then yeah… i won’t do that tho…
how stupid is the God damn machine?
ok don’t answer that :/</p>

<p>Can’t you just wait for the scores to come out, and then ask for a manual rescore if needed?</p>

<p>OrchidBloom is right, I would wait until the scores come out and then you can ask for hand scoring.</p>

<p>^ me too… that’s what i’ll do… if it’s possible…
Hey… do they look at the scratch stuff you write in hand scoring? in case they suspect you of cheating? Would this be proof? Anyone got any idea!!!</p>

<p>thanks for the advice
but I wanted to know ,does the machine look for the bubble that has a darker bubbling or it only looks at those which are bubbled?</p>

<p>I think you’ll be fine. Those machines are pretty accurate and can figure that sort of thing out.</p>

<p>Does anybody remember the problem that looked like a parallelagram? It had 3 levels or lines and they tell you that the Lines were parallel and they give you an angle, telling you it was 22 degrees? And you had to find out what the measure of angle x?</p>

<p>@cenanation
thank you</p>