<p>.. For no lie, I'm crying right now. This is going to screw me over soooo badly. Is there ANY possible way to get rid of these?
PLEASE?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?</p>
<p>I know you can take them off of your score report by calling a talking to a collegeboard representative. I’m sorry that you didn’t do well. Maybe you should have your exams rescored if you think you should’ve done much better.</p>
<p>just dont report them. call collegeboard and ask if you can delete them/cancel them. im not sure what they will say but they will be able to give you the best info. you can also ask your school not to put them on your transcript and just dont put them on your common app. it will look weird that you took ap courses and didnt report scores… but its better than reporting ones…</p>
<p>okay, so you cant cancel, but i know you can pay a fee to have them omit certain scores from your record… i think its like 10 dollars per score per college though…</p>
<p>All I can say is to NOT worry so much. You’ll still be fine in life in general, it’s not like you’ll lose college acceptances and get placed in a totally different job. You’ll be fine. It’s like getting a 30 on a test. It’ll lower your grade, but in the long run, you’ll be fine, at least you’re CARING about your grades, some people will get a 1 and be like “watever…” I mean I know someone who got a 0 on the AP Bio exam, needless to say the teacher wasn’t too happy with him, but you still have a lot of things that you can improve on your application. Keep your GPA high and get a good SAT/ACT score and you’ll be fine. You didn’t fail the course (at least I’m hoping you didn’t), and alot of students don’t even take AP courses in the first place, so you could have not taken these/gotten a 1 and they won’t necessarily still have a big advantage. If I really had to give advice, maybe see if you can self study for these again next year.</p>
<p>Ask your school’s guidance counselor if he/she can take off those scores. I’m she’ll understand, but yea Collegeboard will probably charge you a lot of money (like the other guy said, $10 per score per college, ouch), but maybe you have to deal with it and make your college apps better with a good SAT score and good GPA.</p>
<p>Aw don’t worry about it too much Shampoo Swallower! It’ll all be ok in the end!! Like everyone else above me said, cancel your scores through the College Board, or talk to your guidance counselor. Also, some colleges don’t look too much at the actual score, they use it more for placement after matriculation. With some colleges, you don’t even have to send an official score report until after you’re accepted. If you feel like you scored way too low on the tests though, ask to get them rescored. </p>
<p>pigs at sea, Rahoul said that his friend got a zero on an AP Bio exam (as in a test for the course) and not the actual AP Test that is based on a 1-5 scale</p>
<p>I wish I had started early with AP Exams, like these guys said, don’t take so many and just focus on a few. My school only offered one, Biology, and honestly I was in the dark until I got a 5, I just wish I would have taken this sophomore year so I could know what I was capable of getting on the AP exams, then I could self study for all my sciences like Physics, Chemistry, Spanish, and exempt them in college. </p>
<p>But yea it’s not the end of the world man, the worst thing that will happen is that you won’t exempt these courses in college. Now sure, the college will see that your school offered X number of APs and if you take them off your application and they see you only took 0-1, they might not like that, but it’s better than showing a 1. Only other thing that can balance it out is if you get a 4+ next year if you try really hard and actually study a month in advance.</p>