<p>if so, how?</p>
<p>Grade Cancellation</p>
<p>Grade cancellation deletes an AP Exam grade permanently from your records. Grades may be canceled at any time. However, for grades not to appear on the current year's grade report, AP services must receive a signed letter requesting cancellation by June 15. While there is no fee for this service, your exam fee is not refunded. The grade report that you and your school receive will indicate that the grade has been canceled.</p>
<p>Does he mean canceled voluntarily like you're talking about, or canceled like they threaten at the test if you use a phone or cheat?</p>
<p>One of my classmates had his AP Eng. Lang. score canceled. He went to use the bathroom, pulled his phone out of his pocket for one second to check the time, and someone saw him and canceled his score. Ouch.</p>
<p>On the other extreme, a girl at my school was actually texting during the AP Bio. break last year. A proctor told her to put her phone away, she smiled, flipped her hair, finished her text, and then put it back in her pocket. The proctor didn't even care, but I was pretty unhappy about it.</p>
<p>chaz90, I would say you should have reported it to the College Board or your school principal, but I don't think it would've been worth the hassle, unfortunately. =/</p>
<p>Either way, why sign up for the test if you aren't going to take it seriously? Jeez.</p>
<p>^ A lot of time the tests are already paid for and you are registered for the exam just by being enrolled in the class. Most people that were taking the test today with me were just sitting through it because you have to at least sit for the exam to get the GPA weighting, so I doubt they would care if their tests were invalidated.</p>
<p>That's exactly what happened in this case.</p>