List AP, IB, A Level, O Level Courses (Application Part 2 Section 4)

<p>I have completed and submitted the MIT Application Part 1.</p>

<p>I am currently filling in Application Part 2.
On Section Four, I am asked "List Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate or A-level or O-Level courses taken or under way. (If you have taken the test, please list date and score.)"</p>

<p>I have completed my IGCSE in 7 subjects, my AS Level examinations in 2 subjects and have completed A Level Mathematics. I am currently doing course for 2 subjects for A2 Level examinations and A Level Further Mathematics. That's a total of 7+2+1+2+1 = 13 courses. However, on section four in MIT Application Part 2, I can only add up to 12 courses. So, what should I do?</p>

<p>Similar question… the threads on this forum indicate that you can choose which AP exam scores you report. </p>

<p>Quote:
Am I allowed to simply omit my AP Chemistry score and just list the scores I’ve done better in? </p>

<p>Yes, you are allowed to list your scores selectively. (molliebatmit, supermoderator)</p>

<p>However, the application states:
“List Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate or A-level or O-Level courses taken or under way. (If you have taken the test, please list date and score.)”</p>

<p>I interpret this as, if you have taken the test, you must report the score.</p>

<p>Any clarification molliebatmit?</p>

<p>Thx!</p>

<p>I had the same situation. What I did was include as many as I could fit in section 4. Then, for the last space in section 4 instead of putting another subject I put “See additional info for rest” and included a list of the rest in section 9. Is this ok?</p>

<p>

Pick one not to list. It doesn’t really matter which one, though you will probably want to list your most recent exams preferentially.</p>

<p>

Yes, this is fine.</p>

<p>Overall, there is no single “right” way to list the courses in this section. If you fill out the section in a consistent way that makes sense, you’ll be fine.</p>

<p>

No, you are not required to report the score. You are certainly being requested to do so, and in many cases, it might be to your advantage to list all scores you have, even if one is not the score you’d like it to be. But you are certainly not required to list every score you have – in the absence of a score report, how could they compel you to do so?</p>

<p>My AS examinations were on 300 and my A Level Math examination was on 600. So, when writing down my score and including the total mark by adding “/300” and “/600”, I find that the text boxes are limited to only 5 characters and so I cannot add “/300” and “/600”. What should I put in for the score?</p>

<p>Also, for the scores, should I put the marks or the grades? My A level certificate comes with both the marks and the grades, but the IGCSE certificate has only the grade. We are informed of the marks we got, but the marks are not stated on the certificate. Should I include the marks or just the grades?</p>