<p>Quick question: for standby testing, is it the earlier you arrive at te test center, the higher chance you'll get admitted in or it does it matter what time you arrive?</p>
<p>I did standby today and I would say definitely earlier the better because it’s first come, first serve.</p>
<p>I did standby and it didn’t matter if I was early or not. They didn’t assign our seating until all at once. No line was formed. I just went to the class I would have been assigned to if I wasn’t standby and told them I was standby and they gave me a form that I need to send in asap.</p>
<p>^ I guess it depends on your test center because my center had preassigned seats based on last name and the standby people got sent to the room with the end of the alphabet people. </p>
<p>I would say arrive early anyway. Better safe than sorry.</p>
<p>^ my testing center had preassigned seats based on last names too. Sorry for the misunderstanding. </p>
<p>I did standby and I still went to the class my last name accorded to.</p>
<p>It all seemed too easy for me that I would do this regularly if I tested at the same test center as crazy as that sounds. The only bad thing about it is the standby fee which adds up to $83 to test. </p>
<p>anagenesis, did they give you a form and you have to fill it out and send it to college board via mail?</p>
<p>No. It’s because I originally signed up for the subject tests for Dec but after seeing my Nov scores, I decided to switch to the SAT I since Dec was the last chance for colleges. So I just used my subject test registration number and stuff. The other standby people had to fill in that mail in registration form though.</p>
<p>Okay just making sure that all I have to do is fill in the mail in registration form and send it</p>