<p>1) Halfway or 20 mins into 3rd SAT II, you want to quit...</p>
<p>do you erase all answers & leave? is that allowable? pretend to work on it while checking the other two?</p>
<p>2) On the common app, under the counselor's recommendation, the following question is found: "If you offer AP courses, do you limit the number a student can take?"</p>
<p>In our school, certain APs can only be taken in a certain grade level, some my counselor said you can't do because there is no "facilitator" (for online ap's), however kids from the past have taken online ap's on their own, with a teacher just supervising 2 classes at the same time, or they get their mom to supervise, or yeah...</p>
<p>it seems that if she really likes you for some odd reason, she'll make exceptions. but she's a pretty unlikeable person in general (major consensus between parents and most students) and just says "no" to make you leave her office as soon as possible.</p>
<p>So...chances are the GC will mark "no" to this question, although the answer is technically "yes", right?</p>
<p>i don't know the answer to the second question, but to the first... i don't think you can do that... first of all, you're not allowed to work on another section... you might be able to erase all the answers... and seem like you didn't take the test though.. i dunno...</p>
<p>Ummm, you definitely can't check answers to the other section, but if I remember correctly, well at least this holds true for the SAT I, if you don't answer a single question that tells CB that you are requesting a score cancellation, however, if it's for a subject test I don't know if that would just cancel the one subject or the whole thing, though the former is definitely more reasonable than the latter but you never know with CB. </p>
<p>Ummm, it really depends on your GC, I would say technically since you can't take some AP courses in certain grade levels that this would be the same as limiting the number allowed per se, though it depends on how it's interpreted because some schools cap the number of AP's any student can take [at least through their school system though this in no way stops a student from self-studying or at least I would assume]. Though whatever the answer is, I would think that the GC would have a consistent answer in every application she works on. Also, I didn't even realize this question was on the recommendation, hmmm.</p>