<p>Can an decision be rescinded because of low AP scores (like getting a 1 on the two exams you take this year, while you got a 4 on the one exam you took last year). Would this happen even if your final average in the actual courses is an A or B??? </p>
<p>Can colleges also reconsider scholarship money and honors college acceptance due to this (in this situation)???</p>
<p>(I'm a senior and have already been accepted and payed the enrollment deposit. I am a straight A student, but have gotten a few Bs (all above 85) during senior year).</p>
<p>No, I really really don't think so. AP scores aren't considered in most admissions, why would they matter now? And if you're still worried about getting a 1, why don't you just cancel the score?</p>
<p>you're fine. i doubt AP scores even play that big of a role in the admissions game. im sure a bunch of a 5s look nice but the AP testing program exists to give students an opportunity to earn college credit during high school. not receiving college credit is the worst thing that can happen to anyone who decides to take an AP test.</p>
<p>No it won't. However, here IS a way that adcoms can use AP score information. It's known that many schools have AP coursework and kids bulk up on them. Many succeed in the AP testing and they reap their rewards. However, some schools have some AP classes in name only. This can be borne out by the number of low scoring kids who are in those classes yet don't achieve 4s and 5s.</p>
<p>Case in point: a school in my area is a bright spot in a large urban school district. They have a goodly amount of AP offerings. However, this school's AP English test takers rarely score 4s and 5s. This had been consistent and a top college noticed this. </p>
<p>Even worse, some students from this school also had the AP English teacher write recs -- that were rife with poor grammar!</p>
<p>These two were red flags -- and the students themselves don't know that they're playing without a full deck.... Rightly or wrongly, the overall strength of this school's AP offerings had been called into question.</p>