Hey everyone,
I wanted to ask all of you who took the AP stats exam outside the US. I checked for released FRQ on the college board website and saw that the questions that I had received where different from released, and the same thing happened with AP Psychology. Just wanted to know if anyone out there did the Form B test and if they found the released questions anywhere
Thanks!</p>
<p>This is the History and Social Sciences subcategory, go to the mathematics section :)</p>
<p>I did the form B exam as well!! It was good but the last question was kind of tricky…</p>
<p>The alternate versions of the exams are not released by the College Board, so you will not find them anywhere.</p>
<p>Does that mean we can’t discuss the qs…</p>
<p>Yes. you cannot discuss unreleased exams.
The College Board will automatically cancel your exam score if you are discovered disclosing:
multiple-choice questions;
free-response questions from an alternate exam;
free-response questions from a regularly scheduled exam within two days of its administration; or
free-response questions that are not released on the College Board website two days after the regularly scheduled exam administration.
This means that something you may not have intended as a violation, like casually talking about a multiple-choice question with your friends or your teacher during the exam break, or discussing a free-response online right after the exam, can actually result in having your score canceled.
<a href=“Exam Security Policies – AP Students | College Board ”>Get the Most Out of AP – AP Students | College Board ;
<p>That doesnt prevent anyone from getting anonymous google docs started, though i would never aprove of such sinful behavior.</p>
<p>what i dont understand is that Art History has the same form all around and Spanish Language as well… Whi is Statistics and Psychology different?</p>
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<p>From the College Board:
In 2013, exam versions developed for use outside the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands were administered in 15 subjects: Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Chemistry, English Language and Composition, English Literature and Composition, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, Physics B, Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism, Physics C: Mechanics, Psychology, Statistics, U.S. Government and Politics, U.S. History, and World History. A small subset of students in U.S. schools will also take these exam versions each year to help ensure score comparability across different versions of the exam.
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