<p>will colleges see these?
I'm hoping to show that im actually studying a lot more for myself since my max AP school course wise is 2, and since I only had 1 AP last year and self studied 3 more.</p>
<p>let me know!</p>
<p>will colleges see these?
I'm hoping to show that im actually studying a lot more for myself since my max AP school course wise is 2, and since I only had 1 AP last year and self studied 3 more.</p>
<p>let me know!</p>
<p>How do you plan on communicating this with them? </p>
<p>Since US colleges don’t offer conditional admissions, they have no way of predicting your score (or enforcing you to actually study for the exams).</p>
<p>There’s no reason to self-study AP’s your senior year, esp. if its just to impress colleges.</p>
<p>Ask your guidance counselor to report it. I self studied both ap physics c exams this year and my physics teacher included that in her recommendation lettet, so that’s how I did it. I self studied because I too ap physics b the previous year and ap physics c wasn’t offered and I wanted credit for those classes and I really love physics too and was a bit bored with my actual ap classes and wanted more challenge</p>
<p>Even though your GC included that in his/her rec, it probably didn’t hold much weight. Only a minority of students (even on CC) would self-study for an AP with no incentive (many top universities don’t accept AP credit).</p>
<p>I have self studied for multiple AP’s before, and even with impressive performance in previous years I don’t expect colleges to take my word that I’d add hours of work onto my senior year in high school to perform well on a test that would be of little to no use.</p>
<p>Maybe see if you could dual enroll at a local CC? This way you don’t have to wait until may to show adcoms your ambition and intelligence</p>
<p>i sense sarcasm, but thanks for the help cortana!</p>