Wrong example in the essay

<p>I took the May SAT yesterday, and for the first time ever, I thought that the essay topic was easy. I <em>thought</em> I wrote a good essay which would get me a score of 11/12. I found out later that one of my examples are wrong. Like, a historical example in which the fact is untrue, though it relates properly to the topic. Will I be penalised a lot for that? My other two examples are factually correct. Will they give me a REALLY low score because I didn't have my facts right? </p>

<p>It would be awesommeee if someone could help me out ASAP. Im kinda freaking out a little bit. :(</p>

<p>I wonder how many people used Back to the Future as an example… I know I did</p>

<p>You can make up absolutely whatever you want. Nothing has to be factual. It can all be your own fiction. That’s what I basically did last time and got an 11, so don’t worry.</p>

<p>I took the May 1st SAT, and I pretty much made up the majority of my examples. I don’t think they put that much weight on the actual examples. They look at the structure, grammar, etc.</p>

<p>You can write about how you saved the world from the Apocalypse. It doesn’t have to be factual.</p>

<p>And btw, I didn’t use Back to the Future as an example. I used time paradox in general.</p>