Unless something has changed this year, students are not required to report ANY AP scores, much less all of them. The directive from some schools that “all scores be reported” relates to ACT/SAT/Subject Tests (depending on the particular school) but NOT with regard to AP scores. For admission purposes, report or not as you choose.
You don’t have to report any AP scores as suzy100 wrote, but it’s a little odd that you didn’t take the test after the course, unless it was a financial decision. Typically the entire course is taught to the test, so any extra studying is taking practice exams, and even that is just a couple of weeks before the exam. Throughout the year, teachers used old AP exams as tests in their classes so the students have a good idea of the type of questions and structure of the exam.
Why ever cancel an AP score? You don’t send them until after you are admitted. No college is going to rescind you for a low AP score you never told them about.
@VickiSoCal -You posted the following in another thread about reporting AP scores: “Self reporting as part of admission is up to you. I would report them all or they may think you did even worse.”
You are confusing different steps. There is NEVER any need to actually go to the College Board and cancel an AP score.
Step 1- Application process- report all scores of 3 or higher. (they student I was talking to had no 1’s or 2’s) If you do not report 3’s or higher schools may assume you got a 1 or 2.
Step 2-After admission, send your AP scores to the school you are attending. Use the free score report if you take tests in May of senior year. Low scores don’t matter. You were already accepted. Unless you lied in Step 1. Don’t lie in step 1.
Overall, you did great. You have a lot to be proud of. Report everything and don’t sweat it