<p>you might have gotten like 36 E, 36/35 M, 30/29 R, 28 S. with this in mind, highest you could have gotten would be a 32.5, which is a 33, and the lowest would be 32.0, which is obviously a 32.</p>
<p>My son said he bombed this one which completely threw me in a tail spin. We were counting on this being the 6th and last time. Oh well. So I asked him how many he thought he got wrong in each section and he said he had no clue … I told him to estimate on the high side. Here it is … Which is much more wrong than the dozens of practice tests he has taken and scored around 30-31 normally. This just breaks my heart but what do you think he will get?
e: -5 or -6
M: -10 to -12
R: -15 (he ran out of time and guessed the last 10)
S: -6</p>
<p>Anyone?? Just a guess based on the possible number of wrong answers above… I know it isn’t exact just appx. Waiting 9 more days or longer is going to be hard lol </p>
<p>@tlcmommi English:31 or 30, Math: 29/28 Reading: 23 Science: 29/30. He really didn’t do that bad! But of course, keep in mind, these are only predictions and based on how everyone else did, the curve can fluctuate from years before. The only detrimental subscore was reading. </p>
<p>@ticmommi have you ever considered canceling his scores? Six times is a lot of ACT tests and might have a negative spin on his application. If you cancel the scores it’s as if he didn’t take it and you can send only the scores that he already has. If this test was worse than the ones he has done in the past, cancel them. It’s just not worth knowing if he really did bomb it.</p>
<p>We were told to take it as many times as we possibly can. But I can certainly cancel them. He is trying to get up between 1-3 points higher though. That’s why we are taking it as often as possible. 1 point will make a big difference in scholarships to the schools he applied to and 3 would be huge! </p>
<p>Hey, can I cancel three of my ACT scores? I took it two times as a freshman and I took a mandatory state test one in which I didn’t study for. If so, how?</p>
<p>After thinking about it, I decided not to cancel. Last April he took it and was POSITIVE he did horrible and his score probably went down 2-3 points and he ended up a point higher than his highest.</p>