<p>During my senior year of high school, I took a few St. John's University courses that were offered. I took calc and earned a B+; sociology with a B+; and English with an A. I know it's highly recommended that I take calculus for med school- I'm debating whether or not I should retake it and try to earn an A. I might drop the sociology credits because I don't want a B+ bringing down my GPA. plan on using the english credits because I'd prefer not to take english in college. Should I take the B+ for calc? I've done well this semester and came out a 3.76. Missed an A- in chem by 6 points... (yes, I'm a perfectionist hahah).</p>
<p>I’m not sure you have a choice. If you took college courses for a grade/credit, then it’s part of your permanent record. There would be no reason to retake any of the classes.</p>
<p>You cannot “drop” credits. AMCAS requires that you list and provide trasncripts for all college level coursework you’ve ever taken–even if you were still in high school at the time, or the coursework was not credited towards a degree.</p>
<p>p. 22 of the AMCAS Instruction Manual states:</p>
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<p><a href=“https://www.aamc.org/students/download/182162/data/amcas_instruction_manual.pdf[/url]”>https://www.aamc.org/students/download/182162/data/amcas_instruction_manual.pdf</a></p>
<p>Alright that makes sense. For whatever reason, there’s no grade associated with the calc course. I have to make a call to SJU.</p>
<p>OP, when you signed up for the course, did you specify that you were taking it for a grade? At my high school, we had professors from a local university come to our campus to teach college credit courses. There was a form that asked if you wanted a college grade at the end of the course. (this was different from the grade on your hs transcript)</p>