<p>Hey guys, am I correct in stating that I should NOT send an AP score report to Cornell until I have already been accepted? Does Cornell take AP scores into account when making an admissions decision? If so, is it too late to send an AP score report for ED? Thanks.</p>
<p>It is my understanding that you don’t send in an AP score report until after you are accepted.</p>
<p>I’m sure, to an extent, the AP exams are used for admissions-but only to see if you actually learned anything from your AP courses(basically provides a national standard to level all the different difficulty standards schools have for the APs). Not enough for them to want to deal with AP score reports on top of everything else they get flooded with.</p>
<p>If you lied about your scores, you’ll probably have a repealed acceptance later on. But I’m sure that’s not your case since you’re asking about when to send it, so don’t worry about it until/unless you get accepted.</p>
<p>If I’m wrong, don’t worry about it either–they give you an opportunity to send in missing things Mid-November(which should actually be any day now…)</p>
<p>Yep. No need to send an AP score report until you’re accepted and have decided to enroll.</p>
<p>For most high schools, the available unofficial AP Scores are mentioned on the transcript. Not the class grade but the actual AP score e.g. AP Calculus AB you may have a class grade of a B+ and a AP Score of 5. Both will me mentioned on the transcript. For your high school, check with your guidance counselor on what is shown on the transcript.</p>
<p>Now, if you want credit for any AP class at Cornell then you need to submit official report. Even after submission of an official AP score report you can opt to decline the credit and take an equivalent Cornell class.</p>