Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only submit 5s or maybe 4s. In today’s water down environment, scoring 3 or lower in an AP exam means you didn’t learn anything.
Or that you're a senior who knows their college won't give credit for it, so you didn't bother studying.
Or that you were sick or had some family tragedy around testing day.
Or that your teacher didn't do a good job of making practice tests.
Or that you have test anxiety.
Or that you have a learning disability that makes test-taking difficult.
Etc.
Anonymous wrote:Only submit 5s or maybe 4s. In today’s water down environment, scoring 3 or lower in an AP exam means you didn’t learn anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Side note for those of you talking about humanities AND social sciences as your child's interest and relating that to math/science scores. Do note that socials sciences uses MATH - so don't discount the math part of your child's application. Personally, I'm not sure I'd submit a 3 on a math/physics test for a social science application. Either that, or say they are doing the more pure humanities major (history?) so they don't wonder whether the applicant has the math skills required.
I’m one of those posters. My kid got a B+ in BC calculus in 11th grade and has a perfect ACT math score - I’m confident he can handle the statistics piece of social sciences.
Anonymous wrote:Only submit 5s or maybe 4s. In today’s water down environment, scoring 3 or lower in an AP exam means you didn’t learn anything.
Anonymous wrote:Only submit 5s or maybe 4s. In today’s water down environment, scoring 3 or lower in an AP exam means you didn’t learn anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Side note for those of you talking about humanities AND social sciences as your child's interest and relating that to math/science scores. Do note that socials sciences uses MATH - so don't discount the math part of your child's application. Personally, I'm not sure I'd submit a 3 on a math/physics test for a social science application. Either that, or say they are doing the more pure humanities major (history?) so they don't wonder whether the applicant has the math skills required.
I’m one of those posters. My kid got a B+ in BC calculus in 11th grade and has a perfect ACT math score - I’m confident he can handle the statistics piece of social sciences.
Anonymous wrote:Side note for those of you talking about humanities AND social sciences as your child's interest and relating that to math/science scores. Do note that socials sciences uses MATH - so don't discount the math part of your child's application. Personally, I'm not sure I'd submit a 3 on a math/physics test for a social science application. Either that, or say they are doing the more pure humanities major (history?) so they don't wonder whether the applicant has the math skills required.