Anonymous wrote:Well, if you were looking at his record in a college admissions office and saw in his transcripts that he had taken one AP that year but not submitted the score, what would you conclude? Especially since you can have one AP sent for free each session?
It sounds as if your kid wasn't ready to have taken this class, or he wasn't mature enough to keep up so that he would be prepared for the exam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Computer Science Principles isn't considered to be a difficult exam and he has all day Tuesday to prep. Try it. You don't have to report scores if it doesn't work out.
How do you supposedly know which exam?
How do you know so little about APs yet feel compelled to post?
Computer Science is the only AP left that a freshman would be taking.
- NP
Couldn't a freshman be taking AP Physics? I actually think it's part of the courseload at the engineering magnet or a 9th grader could have just chosen to take it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To answer the OP's question, you can choose not to submit if the score is that. Moreover, most admissions officers would say that they pay much less attention to freshman year than they do to sophomore and onward.
Taking or not taking this test really only matters if your child is shooting for the absolute most rejective schools in the country. Since so many parents on this board are hyperfixated on that level, that's the advice you're getting, but it actually doesn't matter beyond the top 10 undergraduate programs, and even then only if you are applying for a very selective major.
I would say T50 would look at the fact that a student took the class but not the exam.
My kids took AP Gov and AP CS freshman year. One DC got 5s on both; the other DC got a 2 and 3.
Anonymous wrote:To answer the OP's question, you can choose not to submit if the score is that. Moreover, most admissions officers would say that they pay much less attention to freshman year than they do to sophomore and onward.
Taking or not taking this test really only matters if your child is shooting for the absolute most rejective schools in the country. Since so many parents on this board are hyperfixated on that level, that's the advice you're getting, but it actually doesn't matter beyond the top 10 undergraduate programs, and even then only if you are applying for a very selective major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Computer Science Principles isn't considered to be a difficult exam and he has all day Tuesday to prep. Try it. You don't have to report scores if it doesn't work out.
How do you supposedly know which exam?
How do you know so little about APs yet feel compelled to post?
Computer Science is the only AP left that a freshman would be taking.
- NP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Computer Science Principles isn't considered to be a difficult exam and he has all day Tuesday to prep. Try it. You don't have to report scores if it doesn't work out.
How do you supposedly know which exam?
Anonymous wrote:Computer Science Principles isn't considered to be a difficult exam and he has all day Tuesday to prep. Try it. You don't have to report scores if it doesn't work out.