<p>BUTTTT - as I'm thinking back on it, I think i might've put the wrong date down when I was signing the scantron.</p>
<p>This shouldn't be anything to REALLY worry about, right? I mean, do they scrutinize that stuff closely? I definitely signed it, just put the wrong date.</p>
<p>If this might be a problem, who would I contact? arhgh.</p>
<p>Of course it would be voided. It would indicate that either you took it before everyone else, meaning you compromised the entire exam, or you took it after everyone else, meaning you could have gotten answers in advance. Plus, your whole school might get screwed. Good luck, buddy.</p>
<p>I doubt the test will be voided because of a silly mistake with the date. The proctor certifies everything anyway - and your test will be in the certified batch.</p>
<p>I honestly doubt they even check such small details as those. If some sort of complications arise, and they need the specific info, they'll go back and check your specific exam form, but other than that, I really don't think it'll make a difference. You definitely aren't the only one that's done this.</p>
<p>go fix it. my school's ap coordinator holds all of the exams until our school administers the last exam. go to him/her and tell them you need to fix the date. no biggie.</p>
<p>it still probably isnt a big deal anyway, but that's what id do, personally.
actually, my best friend filled in AP CALC Q and AP CALC R because she thought it meant MC questions and free response, so she went to our coordinator and erased one of them.</p>
<p>Yeah, I did date it correctly on all the other parts of the test.</p>
<p>I've decided that I'm gonna leave it. I talked to some people at my school and they said it should be fine, the worst thing that can happen is that my score will be delayed. I'm sure this isn't the first time someone's put the wrong date - it probably happens once every test session without people even realizing.</p>