<p>Hi, I am currently an undergrad,
I took college classes during high school, some were dual enrollment (a class originally taught in a community college becomes taught on high school campus to give both college and high school credit), and I took classes at an actual community college. They were taken during my k-12 years. So should I list those on my med school application when I apply? do I get to pick whether or not to put them? some of them were bad grades and I was wondering since they were really back in the day and they are not related to the medical school requirements then I can just ignore them, is that possible? I mean they don't let us use AP scores, would they let us use college courses taken in high school?
thanks </p>
<p>Any college classes taken during high school must be reported on your AMCAS application and an official transcript must be sent. This includes dual enrollment classes.</p>
<p>See AMCAS Instructions to Applicants pp. 22-23</p>
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<p><a href=“https://www.aamc.org/students/download/182162/data/amcas_instruction_manual.pdf”>https://www.aamc.org/students/download/182162/data/amcas_instruction_manual.pdf</a></p>
<p>You cannot “just ignore” old classes. You must report them and send transcripts. </p>
<p>The penalties for failing to report these classes range from mild (your application will not be processed until any discrepancies in your reported classes are resolved) to severe (permanent disbarment from applying to med school).</p>
<p>And some medical schools do accept AP scores–provide that your college gives you credit equivalent to a specific course at the college (i.e. AP Bio, score 5 = 4 credits for Bio 1101) and it appears on your transcript as such.</p>
<p>Oh ok, I read the first part on their website but did not notice the second one, thank you! </p>