<p>So what did you tell Admissions? Going to take the test? Or rescinded?</p>
<p>Is this at the UW? Are they threatening to rescind your entire acceptance or the direct admit to the business school?</p>
<p>You gotta send em your transcript from the HS you took Chinese from.</p>
<p>yosup- That’s the crux of the OP’s problem-she took Chinese from a private tutor, not at a high school or cc</p>
<p>It doesn’t sound like a big deal. Just take the college’s proficiency test. If you’re as proficient in Chinese as you say, you have nothing to worry about.</p>
<p>Legally the university appears to be clearly in the wrong. The OP would have quite a strong lawsuit if they actually rescinded admission for the reasons given in the first posting (assuming that’s the whole story). </p>
<p>The university negotiated a contract, consummated it by accepting an enrollment deposit, and further solicited and accepted a much larger housing deposit of $2000. The terms of the agreement can be found in all the written correspondence they sent out before the deposit was accepted, and if the part about foreign language only mentions taking it during high school (not necessarily at the high school), then those terms have been met. The university can’t retroactively invent new terms to the detriment of the other party (the student) who relied on their representations and cancelled all other options.</p>
<p>I am in total agreement with siserune. If it is as OP stated, I would not take the test, and I would contest it.</p>
<p>What was the outcome? The exam demanded by the university was scheduled for the 24th.</p>