Anonymous wrote:Assuming what he means is that he messed up the ordering of the long essay sections, it won't matter! They will go through and find the right answer as long as it is obvious what question he was answering. Even if you answered 2 as 3 and 3 as 2, you will get credit as long as it is apparent to the human reader. Unlike a multichoice, this isn't just scanned by AI/a computer and the human reading has discretion to find the answers anywhere in the booklet.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid needs to learn to follow directions. Cancel the score and teach him to do better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^ but he also said he was frantic at the end and tried to fix it by writing question four and it was actually the answer to question 5…so I doubt he will get credit.
He will be fine! I am an AP teacher and have been a reader in the past, we do absolutely everything possible to find the points for the kids. The entire FRQ packet/booklet is scanned into the computer. If we are grading question 4, we scan through the whole document until we find work for question 4 if it doesn't show up on the page labeled "question 4".
I am 99% sure he will still get credit for his work. Regardless, there is nothing that can be done now.
Anonymous wrote:^^^ but he also said he was frantic at the end and tried to fix it by writing question four and it was actually the answer to question 5…so I doubt he will get credit.
Anonymous wrote:Is he talking about the FRQs? This year they had blank booklets with pages numbered “question 1” “question 1” “question 2” “question 2” (2 pages for each)
It would be very easy for kids to just use one page per question, therefore finishing question six on a page labeled question three. Readers have been instructed to scan the entire document to search for the solution to question for even if it’s not on the paper that says question four.
Don’t cancel anything, he may be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot understand how this happened? OP can you elaborate, and what test? Today was AP world, digital. Stats, and Japanese.
How did he enter wrong. This makes no sense for a senior who has taken multiple AP test. I'm not trying to be ugly, but are you sure he is telling the truth?
Anonymous wrote:He's lying. He bombed the test. This wrong order thing is bogus.
Is this lying thing new? Or has it always been a problem?
Anonymous wrote:https://apstudents.collegeboard.org/score-reporting-services/cancel-scores
Anonymous wrote:My ds completely messed up on his AP exam. He thinks he got the answers all right but did not write them in the right spots!! I have no idea how that can even happen but he came home so defeated. By the time he realized his mistake it was too late. So he might actually get a 1. Does it matter for a senior, beyond getting no college credit?