<p>I got a 26, but I could have sworn I did so much better. I was expecting at least a 28. I know I had maybe 5-10 smudge marks from my eraser. Would that even make much of a difference? Should I spend $30 to get it rescored or just use it to retake it (since I planned on taking it twice)?</p>
<p>Well if the machine marked 5-10 correct answers as incorrect, there would be a big difference in your score. But personally, I would just retake it.</p>
<p>I just know that I erased a few and it left a semi-dark smudge still on the answer sheet. Also, after going through all the ACT section threads, I felt like I marked down at least 75% of the answers that everyone decided on.</p>
<p>I’m pondering the same question. You should check out what exactly your score was (I got a 31.5 average but my final score was 32 because it rounded). I left 6-7 questions with smudges but I’m not sure that even if I get those right how much it will change my score…where can I find a chart relating how many you get wrong to your section score?</p>
<p>I feel like I should rescore. How will i ever know if there really was something wrong with it AND they give you a refund if they DO find something wrong, so it’s worth the chance. I don’t want to retake it and get the same score and not be able to rescore my first test bc its passed the three months. I’m rescoring!</p>
<p>Go for it and take it again too. I haven’t heard many reports of re-scoring doing much with the exception of the writing section. </p>
<p>Smudging generally won’t affect your scores --but if you really feel that it could have negatively impacted your test, I would say yes. It’s possible.</p>
<p>Don’t be discouraged if your score dropped, however. It happens-- not every test is the same. So just do your best for the next test.</p>
<p>Has anyone every received a higher score from the hand scoring request with $30 fee? If so, how long did it take for them to notify the adcom of your new score?</p>