<p>Earlier this year I dropped my AP Calculus class. I contacted the admissions office about it and I just recieved a letter informing me of the withdrawal of my offer for admission into UCLA.</p>
<p>Just letting you know it's possible and it can happen. Don't hesitate to tell UCLA about any of your provisions not met. The earlier the better, but it didn't work out for me. </p>
<p>Good luck to you all, I'll be at...UC Riverside =) (or UCSD if they don't rescind my admission either, but I'll have to wait for that)....</p>
<p>I'm sorry to hear it, jv1122. Best of luck at UCR or UCSD. I hear UCR has a program that transfers about 30 students to UCLA after two years, so maybe you can do something with that if you still want to go to UCLA.</p>
<p>I myself am worried that UCLA will rescind my admission if I dropped a plan to take one of my 4 AP exams. Is this possible that they will do it just because of an AP exam? I hadn't taken Macroecon since July (I took it over the summer), so I don't feel that I would be ready for it. But if there's any effect that may happen because I don't take it, I'll figure out how I'm going to take it. It's not available at my school, so I'll have to look somewhere before the deadline.</p>
<p>The three types of changes on the UCLA site are:</p>
<p>Dropping course(s) - Should be listed in the comments section along with an explanation.
Poor grades - Only list grades that you have already received. Do not list expected grades.
Other - Only list changes that have already been made.</p>
<p>Should I report the AP change under Other? Or is that even relevant?</p>
<p>My reason wasn't exactly legitimate. It was just a tough course and well, my teacher hadn't taught it in 16 years so it was a pretty frustrating learning experience. Ah well...</p>
<p>I emailed UCLA about the same issue because I had "planned" to take AP physics, but decided against it.</p>
<p>Here's what they said:</p>
<p>""Dear Peter,
If you decide not to take an exam or if you fail an exam it will not affect your admission. However, if you decide to drop the AP course altogether, you must notify us immediately by filling out a Provisional Problem Form through the admissions website.</p>
<p>Thank you.""</p>
<p>But of course, you should call/email them yourself, just to make sure.</p>
<p>...and jv.. can you take some Calc. course at some community college over the summer to make up for it?.. I dont know, if i were you, i'd be fighting this thing.</p>
<p>Thank you wazzzup7up! I emailed UCLA 20 minutes ago and wasn't able to reach them by phone. The message said I should call back 1-4 PM on weekdays.</p>
<p>I'll still be waiting for an email back, but I'm so relieved!</p>
<p>That really sucks, jv. That's the first I've heard of a rescinded admission. I'd say you're probably OK for UCSD, but I really don't want to jinx it. :/</p>
<p>Yea, don't worry, not taking an AP test will not affect your admissions at all. But then again, taking an AP test and doing badly won't affect your admissions either, and there's always the chance that you could pass and get credit for it. I would say just take the test, you've got nothing to lose (except the registration fee).</p>
<p>I'll see whether I still have time to pay the fee and find a school to take the AP test. If I still can, I'll take it. I'm not too worried about the time it'll take to study.</p>
<p>what about planning to a class for second semester but could not because of schedule conflict? I had reported on my app "no course planned" for sociology, but had to take a different class because of schedule conflict.</p>