<p>Is this possible? I really want to get rid of my horrid 520 World History SAT 2 score that I got in my freshmen year. I was told at the time that it didn’t matter if I did bad because I don’t have to send it. My top school needs all scores - I’m aware that I can “lie” and use score choice anyways but I keep thinking of that one kid who got a letter from Cornell which asked for all his scores.</p>
<p>If you knew you were going to do bad, you should have canceled it. You have to get a lot wrong to get a 520. And I think you should just send it, but make sure your other SAT II scores are very high. This shows the college that you are honest and that it was a fluke. It’s better to not lie. I’m not really sure about creating a new CB account though…</p>
<p>I’m only a sophomore so it’s not too late for me. Yes I knew I was going to do bad; I had signed up for it but got caught up in school work and decided to just not study for it and go all out on my other SAT 2, bio. </p>
<p>I was told repeatedly that it wouldn’t matter anyways; now I am fretting.</p>
<p>I don’t think colleges will reject your application if you have one lousy score. If you’re a top student in everything else, and you have other SAT II grades that are high, they’ll probably just disregard it. They won’t base your whole app on that one grade alone.</p>
<p>Dear RAlec114, trust me, it is not possible. Your scores are tied to your name, your school, your SSN, and so many other things, not just to your account name. By canceling the account you cannot remove the score from your name - attempting to do so will only cause more trouble for you later on.</p>
<p>And, like superexcited said, a 520 in world history is no big deal if all of your other scores are top notch and you have a high GPA in world history. They’ll just assumed that you didn’t take the test seriously, or you thought you cancelled the score but didn’t, or something like that that won’t affect you very much.</p>
<p>The option is always there to retake it… colleges will definitely disregard your old scores, considering you took them as a freshmen.</p>
<p>Ok nevermind. Thanks for the feedback</p>