Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son took pictures on his phone, emailed it to himself, opened it on his laptop, and uploaded it. He didn't have a problem.
Mine took BC Calc today and did the same, without any issues. Her school had them practice this beforehand so she was comfortable with it.
Anonymous wrote:My son has AP World coming up in another couple of weeks. They give them 45 minutes to read five articles, write an entire essay, and submit. It's insane. At the very least, they should be given a full hour or even more.
Anonymous wrote:My son took pictures on his phone, emailed it to himself, opened it on his laptop, and uploaded it. He didn't have a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Tons of people tweeting at the AP twitter feed linked above that they can't get on the server. Posting pictures of the error messages on their computer screen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re the Reddit thread - the advice about checking photo format, if you are choosing to handwrite and submit it MUST be a .jpeg and hi-res.
Really wish College Board had had the sense to cancel these altogether. It is a hot mess.
My daughter cancelled her 3 exam registrations. Gc is arranging refunds. She isn’t going to a school that cares whether she takes them Sr. Year.
APs are about getting the credit not about admissions. My kids have found AP credit valuable in college even for things like getting a better housing lottery slot. Also, one has been able to make tough engineering semesters easier by taking 1 less class. GPA booster.
APs are for credit, but they are absolutely about admissions as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re the Reddit thread - the advice about checking photo format, if you are choosing to handwrite and submit it MUST be a .jpeg and hi-res.
Really wish College Board had had the sense to cancel these altogether. It is a hot mess.
My daughter cancelled her 3 exam registrations. Gc is arranging refunds. She isn’t going to a school that cares whether she takes them Sr. Year.
APs are about getting the credit not about admissions. My kids have found AP credit valuable in college even for things like getting a better housing lottery slot. Also, one has been able to make tough engineering semesters easier by taking 1 less class. GPA booster.
APs are for credit, but they are absolutely about admissions as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re the Reddit thread - the advice about checking photo format, if you are choosing to handwrite and submit it MUST be a .jpeg and hi-res.
Really wish College Board had had the sense to cancel these altogether. It is a hot mess.
My daughter cancelled her 3 exam registrations. Gc is arranging refunds. She isn’t going to a school that cares whether she takes them Sr. Year.
APs are about getting the credit not about admissions. My kids have found AP credit valuable in college even for things like getting a better housing lottery slot. Also, one has been able to make tough engineering semesters easier by taking 1 less class. GPA booster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid got a 5 on physics this morning.
On a scale of 1 to 20 maybe.
No, Silly. APs are scored out of 5.
How are they scored? My DD showed me a scoring rubric that showed 7 points possible. How does that translate to 1-5?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid got a 5 on physics this morning.
On a scale of 1 to 20 maybe.
No, Silly. APs are scored out of 5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Re the Reddit thread - the advice about checking photo format, if you are choosing to handwrite and submit it MUST be a .jpeg and hi-res.
Really wish College Board had had the sense to cancel these altogether. It is a hot mess.
My daughter cancelled her 3 exam registrations. Gc is arranging refunds. She isn’t going to a school that cares whether she takes them Sr. Year.