<p>On the application where it asks for your AP scores, do you have to put scores that you don't want them to see? And when you report the ones you do want them to see, will they see the others as well?</p>
<p>no you don’t have to put the scores on the application but when you send your grades to a college they recieve them all. I believe you can have a score witheld when you send your scores to a college for an additional fee.</p>
<p>ugh. my situation is i got a 3 on World History, and a 2 on US History. I don’t want them to see the US History one. Will it hurt, even if I’m no even request for a credit because I already know they’re not going to give it for neither a 2 nor a 3?</p>
<p>Personally I wouldn’t have reported scores like that, because they’re frankly not very impressive. If you got good grades in an AP class I’m sure that’ll count for something, though.</p>
<p>If you later get admitted and decide to go to NYU you can have collegeboard send in scores, and you can also withhold certain ones, although as nate said I think there’s a fee for that (which is so stupid, they’re all just dirty moneygrubbers :mad:). As a sidenote, besides the self-reporting I didn’t send in my AP scores when applying to colleges because it costs like $15 per college.</p>
<p>^I looked it up. The additional fee for witholding a score is $10 per score, per college.</p>
<p>The problem with low AP scores is that they’ll make your grade in the AP class, no matter how good, look worse since the AP exam itself is supposed to level the playing field. </p>
<p>And yes, to this day it amazes me how an experiment of a standardized test that was never meant for widespread use for college admissions spawned an entire higher education industry that disadvantages the vast majority of students who cannot pay for such things as test prep classes, college counselors, or even the reporting of their own exam scores (exams that most of them have already paid to take).</p>
<p>I’ve gotten B+'s in both those AP classes. So I guess it’ll be better not to send them so my grades won’t look worse…
The only AP’s I’ll really have to consider sending are the ones I’m taking this upcoming year, which I would basically send after I’ve been accepted already (if that happens, that is).</p>
<p>That fee is ridiculous. There’s no way I can afford $10 per college on top of all the other fees that come into applying to colleges.</p>