<p>After reading all these threads, I'm scared that the College Board will lose my test too!!</p>
<p>I live in Coppell, Texas, and so far, I have never heard of College Board losing any tests.</p>
<p>Are some states more susceptible to this "losing test" syndrome than others?</p>
<p>Can anyone enlighten me on this?</p>
<p>Is there anything you can do about it? Probably not- so stop worrying. If you're that concerned, take the ACT instead.</p>
<p>Thats a ****ty answer. I'm better at the SAt than the ACT.</p>
<p>Also, who is the ACT graded by?</p>
<p>the chance of a lost test is small. dont worry about it.</p>
<p>While the chance of a lost test or section is small, it might be worth questioning any really strange result.</p>
<p>Today finally saw closure on the lost free-response section of my daughter's APUSH. Her reported score was a 2 which shocked us (she's a 2300-clubber and almost straight A's) , but she didn't have a strong teacher and we figured, that was thatand filed the report. I happened to come across the report in mid-Sept, just a day before the deadline for requesting the free response part. On a whim, I sent the request and the $7.00. A few weeks later, I got a blank book back. (As a footnote, she has accommodations which allow her to type essays.) When I called CollegeBoard AP--this was around Columbus day--I had to ask clear questions of several customer service reps before someone realized the free response had not been scored.....after many long and frustrating phone calls, she finally got an admission that the section was lost and choices about what do do. One of them is to take a footnoted 4; she isn't about to cancel the score or retake.</p>
<p>The lesson here is not to be afraid to question an odd result (this never would have been corrected if I hadn't requested the booklet and called--apparently CB doesn't question missing free response sections unless you do) and be prepared for a long investigation (not news to cc'ers)</p>
<p>This scares me; but how due to challenge collegeboard.com about the tests and see if the score we got is correct. Do we email them or call them. Any advice?</p>