If you are ill and cannot attend the exam:
Note: The Board of Studies gives less weight to your doctor's certificate if the doctor did not see you while you were ill.
The Board of Studies has changed its practice.
This means that you can apply for withdrawal even if you apply after the exam has started.
You should leave the exam if you feel too ill to complete it.
Note: The Board of Studies gives less weight to your doctors certificate if the doctor did not see you while you were ill.
In this situation, we assume that you were ready to take the exam.
Therefore, it is important that there is a close temporal connection between the exam day and the documentation:
• You must therefore immediately seek medical attention and obtain a doctor's certificate. This also applies to symptoms from known, chronic illnesses.
• You must submit an application for an additional exam attempt immediately after completing the exam. You can submit the documentation afterward.
• If you still have attempts remaining, the study board cannot process your application until you have used all your attempts. Therefore, you should save the documentation for later.
The documentation must show:
• When you contacted your doctor
• How your illness affected you during the exam
• Whether the illness affected you to the extent that you could not leave or cancel the exam
It is important that you read the guidelines on what doctor's certificate must contain. You can find the guidelines in the menu to the left under 'Rules and guidelines' > 'Exemptions' > 'Doctor's certificates'.
Illness in your immediate family may affect you so much that you cannot take the exam.
If there is a death in your immediate family, it may mean that you are so affected that you cannot take the exam.
By immediate family we mean parents, children, siblings, spouse/partner and grandparents.