<p>I got a 2 on AP Spanish last year but I had an A for the year, and I feel I worked hard for it. I am a crappy test taker though and our teacher didn't seem to really understand what was on the test. Still, I've heard that colleges really just care that you tried to challenge yourself and that the grade in the class is more important than the test grade. Is this true? And would it hurt my chance at admission to top schools if I sent my grade? (I took APUS the same year and got a 5, and I've heard that you can't just cancel individual scores, but the whole report for a year so I don't want to cancel out my 5).</p>
<p>Oh man, I got a 2 in Spanish as well, but a B in the class (grrr, that damn teacher wouldn't change that F on quiz, a quiz! that was worth 25% of my grade and was somehow based on factors that weren't being tested...grr). </p>
<p>Well, grade in class is important, but due to grade inflation it might vary in worth, especially since a 2 is truly a pretty low score (means you pretty much didn't understand much).</p>
<p>Still, it won't hurt you much. You can choose not to report it if you wish. But truth is it won't affect much as AP scores are self reported and colleges have always said that they don't really put much focus on AP scores.</p>
<p>Yes, as Kamikazewave notes you can simply omit reporting the score on your college apps. You may also choose to have the grade withheld from the score report if your prospective college wants to see the report (most don't!). See </p>
<p>for details on score reporting.</p>
<p>yeah, you can withhold it. or simply cancel it. you can cancel the spanish grade and leave the us grade.</p>
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<p>so if you are a senior, its too late. but if not, you can cancel it.</p>