do teachers see your ap scores?

<p>so, after not a very stellar performance on the ap tests this may, I started to wonder... Does your teacher get to see what score you got on the ap test? I just don't want my teacher being disappointed, especially before writing my letters of recommendation..</p>

<p>thanks</p>

<p>Yeah they do sorry</p>

<p>When do teachers find out your scores? We get out of school earlier in the South, so I doubt they would find out when we are in school. Do they get a call during the summer?</p>

<p>I’m not sure if they get the names specifically but they do receive the scores for the class they taught. From what my GC tells me…</p>

<p>My teacher said she had my score before I even got mine</p>

<p>At our school, one of the guidance counselors gets the scores in the summer, then during the first couple weeks of school in September, each teacher gets a list of all the students and their scores for their test.</p>

<p>The teachers do know the scores, including those of the self-study students. For me, I self-studied and took the Calculus AB exam, and after receiving it, the Calculus teacher knew mine and she contacted me and she wanted me to take Calculus II at the community college. (My intended plan was to take the AP Calculus AB class and use that class as some sort of free period, studying for BC exam and doing hw from other classes)</p>

<p>I think the someone at your school (probably guidance cousellor) gets all the scores in the summer. It’s basically up to him/her what he/she wants to do with them. I imagine most of them would forward the results to the AP teachers. As for self-studies, again, it really depends on what your GC’s do with them. </p>

<p>Does anyone know when AP awards specifically get to the school in September? And on the score report you get in the mail, does it specifically say which award you got (E.g., “you got AP Scholar”) or it just lists all the awards and their qualifications?</p>

<p>On my AP score report, it didn’t say any award that I receive, and I have 3 5’s, which qualifies me for the AP Scholar award.</p>

<p>Same… it doesn’t specifically say which title you get…</p>

<p>they tell your college though, and I BELIEVE you get some certificate in September, but I’m not sure</p>

<p>My neighbor is the AP Chem teacher at our high school, and she received her students’ scores in the mail (including mine) about a week after I did.</p>

<p>really… AP teachers get their students’ scores in the mail too??? </p>

<p>Like an official score report from College Board listing all their students’ scores? </p>

<p>So I’m guessing that when the guidance orders the exams, he/she has to list all the teachers and their addresses and their students??</p>

<p>Yes, my APUSH teacher congratulated me on my 5 :)</p>

<p>What?? I can’t imagine that CB actually makes the guidance list all the teachers and their addresses and their students.</p>

<p>And these are the teacher’s personal addresses… not the school’s. </p>

<p>Any idea whether teachers know self-studiers’ scores as well (E.g., took the regular Chemistry class but still took the AP exam)?</p>

<p>hmm, at my school our ap coordinator gets this list of every score for every test and distributes it to every teacher, so teachers can look at every score for any student.</p>

<p>As a teacher, I don’t get mailed scores at home, but we can get a copy from the guidance counselor. The scores from the AP aren’t disaggregated by teacher anyway, so if I want to know the results of my own personal students, I have to recalculate the averages that are provided.</p>

<p>The scores provided are for every student who put our school code (which sometimes includes some students who put in the wrong school code), regardless of whether they were enrolled in a class or not.</p>

<p>Urgh! So next time, maybe I should put a wrong school code on purpose. Though that may be a bad idea if I plan on receiving an award</p>