<p>On the USC website, it says credit can be given for:</p>
<p>Mathematics (AB) <em>not AB subscore</em>- 4 sem. units </p>
<p>Mathematics (BC) - 4 sem. units </p>
<p>I'll be taking the BC exam this May and I'm unclear as to what the above means. From what I know, most colleges give 8 credits for the BC exam, 4 credits for either the AB or the AB subscore if you do not get a high enough score on the BC. Does USC only give 4 credits for AP Calc, regardless of which exam I take? And if I get say a 3 on the BC but a 4 AB subscore- would I not get 4 credits for AB? </p>
<p>I'd greatly appreciate if someone could clarify the situation</p>
<p>Thanks in advance</p>
<p>If you:</p>
<p>-Take the AB exam and score a 4 or 5 = 4 semester credits
-Take the BC exam and score a 4 or 5 = 4 semester credits
-Take the BC exam and score a 1, 2 or 3 overall = 0 semester credits, regardless of your subscore.</p>
<p>You could get 8 semester credits by taking both exams and scoring a 4 or 5 on both.</p>
<p>Which test should you take? Doesn’t matter. You are Marshall, so either one will give you subject credit for Math 118. [url=<a href=“Home - USC Marshall”>Home - USC Marshall]Freshman</a> | Business Administration | USC Marshall School of Business<a href=“Ignore%20where%20it%20says%20scores%20of%203%20get%20elective%20credit.%20That%20is%20left%20over%20from%20the%20pre-2009%20policy%20and%20needs%20to%20be%20corrected.”>/url</a></p>
<p>Maximum AP/IB credit awarded = 32 semester credits.</p>