Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. Not at all.
This blanket statement is false. We know that Emory wants AP scores if you don’t submit SAT scores. See 2023 Selingo interview. Sara Harberson talks about a candidate being rejected for having a 4 instead of a 5 on an exam. We know in Selingo’s book a 4 on AP Calc actually helped an applicant over the hump.
How would she know this?
Because she witnessed it as an admissions officer/dean.
Anything that happened regarding testing of any kind before the last few years is irrelevant. When did she last work in admissions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. Not at all.
This blanket statement is false. We know that Emory wants AP scores if you don’t submit SAT scores. See 2023 Selingo interview. Sara Harberson talks about a candidate being rejected for having a 4 instead of a 5 on an exam. We know in Selingo’s book a 4 on AP Calc actually helped an applicant over the hump.
How would she know this?
Because she witnessed it as an admissions officer/dean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do AP exam scores impact college admissions? I understand admission decisions take into account the specific AP course taken and the grade received as it is reflected on the HS transcript. I get that high AP exam scores can earn college credit after admission. But, do colleges also consider the actual AP exam score during admission decisions? If someone self-studies for an AP exam and scores a 5 without taking the course (which means, it is not listed on transcript), does the high score contribute to their admissions profile in any way? If AP exam scores are relevant, what is the best way to highlight them in a college application?
Here is a good article: https://www.compassprep.com/how-colleges-use-ap-scores/
Basically, if AP scores are self reported, colleges will factor them into the admissions decision.*
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. Not at all.
This blanket statement is false. We know that Emory wants AP scores if you don’t submit SAT scores. See 2023 Selingo interview. Sara Harberson talks about a candidate being rejected for having a 4 instead of a 5 on an exam. We know in Selingo’s book a 4 on AP Calc actually helped an applicant over the hump.
Anonymous wrote:The individuals responding "No" to this question are delusional. Why WOULDN'T admissions consider them? I swear, this era of hiding your test results is really bizarre!
For most applicants, if you submit an application test optional, OF COURSE they don't think it's because you couldn't afford the ACT/SAT test registration fee, or that the available test center was too far from your home. They think you bombed the test.
Likewise, if you submit your grades and the submitted transcript shows all A grades in AP classes that have been grade-inflated into oblivion, but you don't disclose your AP test results, OF COURSE they don't think it's because you couldn't afford the test registration fees, or that you had to take care of your kid brother during the test window(s) in May, etc. They think you bombed the test(s).
And when it comes to the AP tests, electing not to report your scores is even more damning because it only takes a 75% or whatever to attain a 5 on these tests. What does it say about your A grades if your mastery of the subject matter cannot even satisfy a 75% threshold?
Anonymous wrote:The individuals responding "No" to this question are delusional. Why WOULDN'T admissions consider them? I swear, this era of hiding your test results is really bizarre!
For most applicants, if you submit an application test optional, OF COURSE they don't think it's because you couldn't afford the ACT/SAT test registration fee, or that the available test center was too far from your home. They think you bombed the test.
Likewise, if you submit your grades and the submitted transcript shows all A grades in AP classes that have been grade-inflated into oblivion, but you don't disclose your AP test results, OF COURSE they don't think it's because you couldn't afford the test registration fees, or that you had to take care of your kid brother during the test window(s) in May, etc. They think you bombed the test(s).
And when it comes to the AP tests, electing not to report your scores is even more damning because it only takes a 75% or whatever to attain a 5 on these tests. What does it say about your A grades if your mastery of the subject matter cannot even satisfy a 75% threshold?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do AP exam scores impact college admissions? I understand admission decisions take into account the specific AP course taken and the grade received as it is reflected on the HS transcript. I get that high AP exam scores can earn college credit after admission. But, do colleges also consider the actual AP exam score during admission decisions? If someone self-studies for an AP exam and scores a 5 without taking the course (which means, it is not listed on transcript), does the high score contribute to their admissions profile in any way? If AP exam scores are relevant, what is the best way to highlight them in a college application?
Here is a good article: https://www.compassprep.com/how-colleges-use-ap-scores/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. Not at all.
This blanket statement is false. We know that Emory wants AP scores if you don’t submit SAT scores. See 2023 Selingo interview. Sara Harberson talks about a candidate being rejected for having a 4 instead of a 5 on an exam. We know in Selingo’s book a 4 on AP Calc actually helped an applicant over the hump.
How would she know this?