AP scores from middle school?

<p>Are AP scores from middle school saved? I got a 5 on BC calc in 7th grade, and I don't want to spend another $100 to take it again. Thanks!! :)</p>

<p>bumpp /10char</p>

<p>I had called collegeboard several years ago with a similar question and was told that if a student continues taking AP exams every year, the scores will all be saved and submitted to the schools that you request. If there is a gap, the scores are saved for 4 years and then archived. At that point there was a nominal fee (I can’t remember what it was) to have the archived scores submitted to a school. That being said, the other question you need to consider is whether or not the colleges you are interested in will take a score from 7th grade. I would recommend calling both collegeboard (to verify what I’m saying) and the college (to see what their policy is). I would also get the policy in writing. Last, there could be a fine line here, because even if the college says, today, that they will take your 7th grade Calc BC score - which is VERY impressive I might add! - it doesn’t mean that the school won’t change the policy by the time you are ready to enroll there. Good luck to you!</p>

<p>If you took and passed Calc BC as a 7th grader (a class that typically corresponds to 1st year college classes and is considered 1 year ahead if taken by a senior in high school) odds are that you’ll be dual-enrolled for Calc2 and Calc3 in 8th grade, then Discrete Math and Stats in 9th, then Linear Algebra and more advanced classes sophomore year.
Seek out UCBAlumnus or Data10 on this forum for more detailed math advice.
So essentially you’ll have accumulated enough college math credits by the time you’re a sophomore or junior in High School that the AP credit will be moot. Start looking into the Accelerated math tracks (for college students) at Northwestern or HarveyMudd.
Have you taken the SAT for CTY?</p>

<p>He’s a junior now with a 2300+ SAT score <a href=“Is this a bad idea? - Stanford University - College Confidential Forums”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/stanford-university/1623673-is-this-a-bad-idea.html&lt;/a&gt;. He should be ok, if the math on his schedule supports it.</p>