<p>I got a 4 on the AP Lang & Comp test. I reallyreallyreally wanted a five. I felt like I was either going to get a low five or a high four going in to the test. Borderlinnneee. And I would have gotten a five, had I not freaked out during the last essay of the free response. I BOMBED that essay big time, and it is an absolute piece of crap, and I want to pretend that never happened. Because it is an absolute train wreck. </p>
<p>I'm at the point that I really don't give a crap about the difference between a 4 and a 5 for college credits... I just don't want my English teacher to read that crap. Because I'm a sucker for teachers' opinions. Even if I've graduated. -<em>- And she actually does read our booklets when she gets them back. Because she uses them for an activity the next year's students do. Which means that she'll read it AND a whole bunch of next year's seniors. ></em>____<</p>
<p>On Collegeboard, it says you can pay $7 to get "your original free-response booklet(s) from the most recent exam administration by contacting AP Services." Would this mean that she'd never get my booklet if I cough up $7??</p>
<p>I probably won't actually go through with it... but if I could get that booklet back... it's so tempting...</p>
<p>Wait, so teachers get back the booklets automatically? I thought Collegeboard just threw them out or something.</p>
<p>Teachers can pay $7, just like us students.</p>
<p>oh, so the OP’s teacher pays that much since she’s getting everyone’s? that’s a lot of money.</p>
<p>Wait, hang on…we get two FRQ booklets during the Lang test. One is where the prompt is and also where most people do their outlining. The second one is the lined paper where we write the essays. I think your teacher will only get back the green sheet with the prompt, where people wrote their brainstorming, <em>not</em> the actual essay/lined paper. Someone correct me if I’m not wrong, cuz I’m not sure</p>
<p>The teacher gets back the green brainstorming insert for free. If the teacher wants, he/she can pay $7 per test to get the actual pink booklet with lined paper and essays.</p>
<p>my teacher had at least forty booklets on her desk for us to look at last year… danggg. well, thanks for the information :)</p>
<p>@yellow, see page 29 of this book here: <a href=“http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/ap-program-guide.pdf[/url]”>http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/ap-program-guide.pdf</a></p>
<p>This shows the prices for teachers/schools to buy back student FRQ books in bulk. So yes, teachers can and do buy student books, so I recommend you buy yours first!</p>