Why is that funny? That’s exactly what you have to do. https://apstudents.collegeboard.org/help-center/can-i-register-ap-exam-if-my-school-doesnt-offer-ap-courses-or-administer-ap-exams |
Because they can? What makes you think they "give points" for those doing sports outside of school? IMO a kid's time would be better spend on activities (e.g olympiads) that cramming for extra AP tests. |
Yes, it would. In fact, when granting college credits, a high school transcript is not considered at all. For example, if a student takes an AP US History course and earns an A but does not take the exam, it counts for nothing in terms of college credits. For college credits, the only two documents reviewed are the AP exam scores and the dual enrollment (DE) college transcripts. Essentially, from a college credit perspective, an AP exam score holds value on its own, regardless of whether the course is taken. The AP course itself helps demonstrate course rigor for college admissions, but it’s the exam score that earns the college credit once admission is granted. |
| 19 total - max allowed AP per school year - accepted 2 T-5 school. |
LOL mine did mine did 7. And he got a 2 on the test in two of those classes, AP Psyc, AP World History. The rest were all 5's. MIT graduate, Stanford, CMU acceptances as well. |
But I was told MIt and Stanford want well rounded kids and not just stem freaks.... |
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My child was admitted to Franklin and Marshall, Bucknell, GWU and NYU. That level of college.
2 AP courses. 4 on one, 2 on the other. Our private high school does not offer many AP courses but mostly honors and unweighted GPAs. |
Was this recent? My friend’s kid with 15 APs got rejected from NyU. All 4s and 5s. |
Most schools administer the AP tests for their students even if they don’t offer AP classes. Locally, I think GDS is the only one that doesn’t offer the AP tests to their students. |