I planned on taking the AP English Literature, AP Chemistry, and AP Calculus exams, but was not aware–until a few days ago-- of the fact that I’d only be taking 1/3 of them. In early November, students taking AP’s were required to speak with the AP coordinator and join their respective class sections, although I wasn’t present; I had a dentist appointment that hindered me from going to school. On the following day, my teachers gave me the class section codes and instructed me to go to the library. (Simple, yes?) While I was able to successfully sign into the class section for AP chemistry, the others yielded the error message: “limited class enrollment”. Frightened by this, I promptly contacted the AP coordinator, who couldn’t provide an immediate solution. For weeks, the issue went unresolved, becoming a nuance that I felt would add a late fee to my exam registration at worst. It was only after my teacher asked me if I’d signed up for the exam, that I’d contacted my AP coordinator once more; I entered her office and outlined the problem, but she sent me to the media center specialist. He sent the College Board an email to troubleshoot the issue. (and forwarded the response to the AP coordinator). Ideally, this should have put an end to the problem, but the class section has yet to appear in AP Classroom. A few days ago, I requested the contents of the email sent to the College Board from my AP Coordinator, but she has yet to provide a clear answer. While this issue is certainly not a matter of life and death, her slow response time and deflection only intensify my anxiety. Should I stop studying for the AP Calculus AB Exam? Will my studying go to waste? What is the next logical step?
Oof, for some reason the first post was immediately taken down. O_O I’m not sure how moderation works, but a more thorough explanation of how this post is particularly explicit would be lovely. (I’m really glad that I copied the message)
@CollegeReadyTH any update?