HELP! Question about self-reporting AP scores

<p>Hey guys, I just got my AP scores back (rising senior) and they're looking pretty good.</p>

<p>APUSH - 5
AP Calc BC - 5 (AB subscore - 5)
AP Chem - 5
AP Eng. Lang. - 5
AP Stats - 5
AP French Lit - 2 (FML)</p>

<p>As you can see, AP French Lit (which, FYI, is no longer offered) did not go so well. It was a self-study with a handful of other students and my French teacher (usually kids self-study in their senior year, but my French teacher told me to self-study since 2009 was the last administration). Anyway, I knew going in that I was going to be blindsided by the exam and was expecting a 3 or below, so the score was no shock to me. </p>

<p>My question is essentially how I should spin this on college applications. Can I selectively omit scores when self-reporting or should I just look into having it cancelled? Is it possible to have an AP test cancelled after receiving your score? Btw, I'm looking at Caltech EA, MIT EA, UChicago EA, Harvey Mudd, Duke, HYPS, and a handful of other schools. Thanks in advance.</p>

<p>I would just not report it. There is no requirement that you report AP scores. Since you did it as a self study, there will be no expectation from your transcript that you had taken the exam. Just report the other scores and it will be finel. Congrats on the excellent scores, by the way!</p>

<p>We were shocked to see standardized test scores on the official school transcript. But, we were informed that we could request to remove any scores we didn’t want included. I’m wondering how many students will get tripped up by trying to utilize Score Choice at an “opt out” school while their transcripts show the scores they omit. Bottom line: check that transcript and use Score Choice where allowed.</p>

<p>I think our school made a policy that we could not remove anything from our transcript (not even PSAT and AP scores, which are not required).</p>

<p>Its not a big deal for me since I will end up reporting everything, but for someone else, they might start up a pretty big argument because of the new score choice policy.</p>