<p>is there any way you can figure out your ap number or did you just have to keep that booklet, i have orientation before they will probably get to my house and i really want to know what classes to sign up for</p>
<p>I waited my freshman and sophomore years. I won't be taking any more AP classes next year; I just HAD to know.</p>
<p>tee06, you just had to keep the booklet.
or you can retrieve them w/ ur SSN if you marked it on the test.</p>
<p>i also think you might be able to get your AP number if you call an AP operator and give him the following info (its worth a try):
*SSN
*Name
*Phone
*Address
*School
*Names of tests taken
*Birth-date</p>
<p>Just an idea, but maybe your high school kept the numbers.</p>
<p>i got a 720 on the SAT II for US History... i'm waiting to get my score in the mail, but just from my SAT II score what would you say I got on my AP? like do most people who have above a 720 score atleast a 4 on the AP?</p>
<p>my friend got a 680 and a 4 so good luck</p>
<p>Im a Sophmore and I got a:</p>
<p>4 on Macroeconomics
4 on Microeconomics</p>
<p>Plus I really dont believe all of the people who say they got straight 5s on all the AP tests. Its bull.</p>
<p>lol hockeystar, this website has a lot of people who really do get straight 5s...so get used to it haha</p>
<p>Hockeystar2b, have you any method of proving that we didn't get straight fives? Given that this is CC, I would think that getting fives is quite probable.</p>
<p>Hockeystar2b, I previously posted that my son obtained 5's in all 5 AP's he took. If I was a liar, I would not have posted that he got a 690 on the SAT I in math. He got 800's in the other two sections, but math has always been an issue for him. Of course, he would have loved a perfect SAT I, but it didn't happy. Life goes on. Everyone is different and has different skills. When I see kids posting that they received scores of 2400 or 2300+ on the SAT I, I don't assume they are lying because it is higher than my son's 2290. Your AP scores were great, be proud of yourself.</p>
<p>Shazilla, I bet you are going to do well. My son explained that there was more room for wrong answers on the AP's, although they were harder. He obtained an 800 on the SAT II in US History and a 5 on the AP. Although the subjects are different, he scored a 780 in World History SAT II but a 5 on Europ. History AP. Also, he scored a 790 in Bio E SAT II, but 5 on the Bio AP.</p>
<p>I don't know, the thing that gets annoying to me is when some kids go</p>
<p>5 (BUT i was TOTALLY EXPECTING a 2!!!!), no one cares what you were expecting and secondly deep down you knew you made a 5 so shut up!</p>
<p>p.s. I got 5s on four different tests, so I'm not a whining kid with 2s.</p>
<p>Thank you, that is all.</p>
<p>lol corroborator, your post pretty much summed up CC</p>
<p>"god i hate kids who complain about 5s they didnt expect/2390s/etc.!! I am also one of those kids! but i'm different!"</p>
<p>hehe no offense meant at all</p>
<p>getting a 5 on an AP exam really isnt that hard, considering how many people take the tests that arent really qualified to take them. This makes it easier for those who are qualified to earn higher scores due to the curve. Even for the AP exams where nearly everyone is qualified (BC Calc, Physics C, etc..) the curve is so great that it allows over 30% of students to earn 5's. So, chances are CC kids arent lying about their AP scores. After all, I got 7 5's and 2 4's and I am not going to a top 20 school.</p>
<p>I believe the difficulty of AP exams is strongly dependent on class instruction. According to statistics, AP Calc and physics have extremely high passing rates, but at my school the highest physics B exam grade has been a 3. No matter how hard someone studies outside of class it's hard to overcome having an exceptionally awful teacher. Conversely, AP LIT and lots of the social studies exams have relatively low passing rates, however, at my school almost everyone gets 4s and 5s on them. AP exams do a good job reflecting the difficulty of coursework and quality of instruction in particular schools, but I wouldn't go as far as to say that getting a 5 isn't hard. No matter how good the instruction or how well prepared you think you are a 5 isn't guaranteed.</p>
<p>2005:
Chemistry - 4
US History - 3
BC Calculus - 5
-AB Subscore - 5
Statistics - 4</p>
<p>2006
English Language - 2
World History - 4
European History - 3
Biology - 3
Phys C: Mech - 3
US Govt - 4
Comp Govt - 4
Env. Science - 5
Psychology - 4
Macroeconomics - 4
Microeconomics - 4
Physics B - Not Available</p>
<p>World History - 4
Comp Sci A - 4
Spanish Language - 4
U.S. History - 4
Physics B - 3
BC Calc - 4
Government - 4
Micro - 4
Macro - 5
Physics C Mech. - 5
Physics C E&M - 4
English Lang. - 4
Chemistry - 5</p>
<p>I agree a LOT depends on the subjects & the teachers/classes taken in how well the students do on the AP exams. At our kids' HS, the teachers pride themselves in doing a good job of covering the material & several help formulate the curriculum nation-wide for the AP exams, It doesn't surprise me that the kids at their HS do extremely well on the AP exams--mostly 5s, with a few 4s & fewer other scores. You can believe what you like, but the folks who participate in CC are NOT a self-selected group & tend to do extremely well on testing.</p>
<p>
<p>"god i hate kids who complain about 5s they didnt expect/2390s/etc.!! I am also one of those kids! but i'm different!"</p>
<p>hehe no offense meant at all
</p>
<p>Haha, I'm not afraid to say, "Yes I knew I got a 5 that test was f***** easy!" None of this "ooooh i was expecting a 2" stuff.</p>
<p>i guess since everyone else is posting their previous year scores</p>
<p>2004
World History- 5</p>
<p>2005
USH- 4
Chem- 5</p>
<p>2006
Calc BC/AB- 5/5
Physics B- 5
Stats-5
US Gov- 5
Euro- 5 (self study)
English Language- 4 (self study)</p>