<p>um, no…look at this scenario</p>
<p>My D has a B in AP stats, the teacher is eh, and in order to get credit for a math class at her college, she would need a 4 or 5 on the test, which she knew was not gonna happen, so why stress of that test and kill yourself prepping, but instead focus on a class you have a good chance of getting a 4 or 5 on</p>
<p>ANd gee, my D took the time to look at her new college, and did some research, and my logic is not flawed, my D was actually very intelligent in how she managed her time, because she did check it out</p>
<p>Getting a 2 in AP stats as a senior is meaningless…think about it real carefully, she would have needed a 4 in order to make any difference at her college in with regards to waving a math requirement, and that was just not going to happen, so she focused on other AP tests, which is not folly, it is pretty smart</p>
<p>So you how do you know if you would get credit? You do some research, that is what smart people do</p>
<p>She is a senior…and guess her friend going to Yale should have taken all those tests just cause even though not one woul he be able to apply to getting credit for, and Yale doesn’t ask to see his Senior AP test scores…ah, what a fool he was…guess looking at what Yale wanted, and that he didn’t really want to opt out of required classes anyway, guess he should have sat through that useless tests</p>
<p>And the AP stats test was over 3 hours…not 1 1/2 hours, where you get that figure, who knows</p>