Would you consider this cheating?

<p>wow honestly, it might make or break you and 1) nobody will care 2) nobody will find out 3) it might change a lot 4) you'll forget about it and 5) everyone will do it and 6) everyone here who's saying DONT DO IT HAVE INTEGRITY would do it themselves.</p>

<p>kthxn</p>

<p>Some people here have too much integrity to do that, and at least a few have too much speed to be faced with the temptation to do that.</p>

<p>Just FYI, I saw some people in my testing room scribble down last answers probably 1 second after time was called. This occurred after several sections, so the proctor likely saw, but she didn't say anything.</p>

<p>I know that I wrote the last three or four words of my essay hurriedly after time.</p>

<p>I think that no normal proctor is going to get your scores canceled because of something like that.</p>

<p>
[quote]
everyone here who's saying DONT DO IT HAVE INTEGRITY would do it themselves

[/quote]

so, you have substantiated evidence to prove that statement, right?</p>

<p>tokenadult: There is indeed a thing such a too much integrity, though I'm sure you didn't mean it that way. It is too much when it gets in the way of what is realistically better and harms nobody. It is too much when it is applied to such unusual and pointless circumstances that people forget what it is genuinely about. It is too much when it is an ego-stroke instead of doing good. However, I'll refrain from going for the doctoral thesis in philosophy here...</p>

<p>However, this is an area where your points are good... and (imo) so are the points of the other side. So learning to speed up would be a good compromise in order to not have to be tempted by something that may or may not be a big deal. You're right that the faster test takers needn't worry about this on a personal level.</p>