<p>So this morning, as I was about to begin taking my SAT Reasoning test, I placed my gold Citizen Quartz watch onto my desk. My SAT proctor then grabbed the watch hastily and said, "You don't need this watch. I am the timekeeper." So I asked back for my watch repeatedly and repeatedly, but she wouldn't relent. Instead she said, "The watch is only going to distract your focus." I also told her that it is unfair since the CollegeBoard permits the use of a watch so as long as it doesn't alarm. So I began taking the test without my watch. Quarter-way through the test, the proctor assigned me (as well as the test takers) to write in cursive the statement at the back of the SAT booklet. As she watched me sign, she remarked, "The only good thing about you is your penmanship." Finally, as I was reentering the classroom from a break, she looked up at me (I'm really tall) and said, "I finally sized you down."</p>
<p>What should I do? It's clear that I was mistreated on a personal level.</p>
<p>I mean I laughed about it, really, cuz at a point in time the proctor told me, "If you're going to report me, you'd better tell the authorities that you were watching your watch too much." So I asked her, "Why do you think they call it a watch? Aren't you supposed to watch it?" lol. But seriously, I felt that she was unfair. A girl's cell phone rang in the middle of the test, and she simply just took it away and said, "You're going to get me in trouble." I felt discriminated against for no reason whatsoever.</p>
<p>If you want to watch your watch too much, that's your perogative. If you want to pick your nose, that's your perogative. (I sure hope I'm spelling that right.) If you want to stare at the ceiling instead of filling in bubbles, that's your perogative. Etc.</p>
<p>Sounds like she has an issue with being in charge.</p>