<p>Well thank you !!! I appreciate your help !!!</p>
<p>You should be absolutely fine. One “2” will have little to no effect on your admission.</p>
<p>Tomathist, If you really fear the 2, you can call the CB to withhold that “2” score to colleges that you’re sending you’re reports to. It costs a bid, but its not that much.</p>
<p>Thanks, but even if I do that, they are gonna figure out that I’m not sending the score cuz I did bad on it… So I guess I’ll just let the score go of my mind… Thank you guys for information though!</p>
<p>You can even permanently cancel the score… honestly colleges don’t hold AP scores against you.</p>
<p>same situation here…i screwed my USH</p>
<p>hey i have a quick question about what’s being discussed in this thread.
if i wish to “withhold” one score (ap lit, for example) and pay that $10,
does anyone know how it will appear on the ap report that goes to colleges?
will it look like</p>
<p>AP English Language 5
AP English Literature X
AP Environmental Science 5</p>
<p>or</p>
<p>AP English Literature 5
AP Environmental Science 5</p>
<p>with no remaining records of AP Lit? will colleges find out I took AP Lit?
Thanks.</p>
<p>And plus, does anyone know when this is due by?</p>
<p>It’s probably better to go ahead and report the score. Colleges will wonder why a student did NOT report a score of the AP class is listed on his transcript…</p>
<p>Straight from the collegeboard website</p>
<p>Score Withholding
You may have one or more scores withheld from the report sent to the college you indicated on your answer sheet. To have a score withheld from the indicated college, AP Services must receive your written, signed request by mail or fax by June 15 accompanied by a $10 fee per score, per college. If your request is not received by June 15, the score is automatically sent to the college indicated on your answer sheet.</p>
<p>The score will be withheld from any future score reports sent to that particular college. You may later release the score to that college by sending AP Services a signed written request.</p>
<p>If you later decide to send an AP Score Report to a different college, however, you need to contact AP Services to have the score withheld from that score report.</p>
<p>A request to withhold a score does not permanently delete your score, and all exam scores, even those withheld from score reports sent to colleges, are sent to you and your school.</p>
<p>Score Cancellation
Score cancellation deletes an AP Exam score permanently from your records. Scores may be canceled at any time. However, for scores not to appear on the current year’s score report, AP services must receive a signed, written request by mail or fax by June 15. Please complete the Score Cancellation Form (.pdf/113KB) and return it to the address or fax number indicated. While there is no fee for this service, your exam fee is not refunded. The score report that you and your school receive will indicate that the score has been canceled.</p>
<p>Most colleges don’t care about AP scores, and they won’t assume you did poorly if you don’t report one. After all, the better you do on the AP’s, the fewer classes you’ll be taking (and fewer dollars for them!).
However, you should work really hard to prepare for the english portion of the SAT/ACT because they DO pay a great deal of attention to THAT!</p>
<p>I have a question relating to this thread. In my case I got a 3 on my AP English exam. I am planning to apply to some top schools (MIT, Caltech, Stanford, Harvard, UC Berkeley), but I have a question on how to report AP scores when I apply on Fall 2010. Do I just write the AP scores directly to the application or I have to actually call College Board to send scores for a fee of $15 for every university I apply to.</p>
<p>you do not send your AP report to every school! just to the school you plan to attend. If you take your senior year APs, then you can do it for free, by listing it on the paperwork you fill out at your school.</p>
<p>DS applied to 18 colleges this past year and only one of them asked for AP scores to be sent from the College Board.
Even then it was optional!</p>