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College Board Advanced Placement Credit

MIT grants credit for high scores on some College Board Advanced Placement (AP) exams. It does not grant credit for secondary school courses teaching AP curricula.

This page applies to members of the Class of 2013 only. For information about the use of AP and other exam scores in Admissions decisions, please visit http://www.mitadmissions.org/. UAAP cannot answer questions about qualifications for admission to MIT.

Click below for specific information on receiving credit in the following areas:

General Information

If you took an AP exam more than once, only your higher score will be counted. MIT does not offer partial credit. For scores lower than 5 (or 4 for the BC Calculus examination), credit will not be awarded.

You are responsible for making sure that your AP scores are sent to MIT. You may designate MIT as a recipient (code 3514) when you register for your AP exams, or order a report later from the College Board. The Board reports scores electronically to MIT, so there's no need for rush reports. MIT will not accept scores from paper reports sent to you.

Any AP scores received by MIT will appear in your Online Freshman Advising Folder.

Credit in Subject Areas

More information about MIT's requirements in these areas is on the General Institute Requirements page.

Biology

No credit is given for the College Board AP Biology exam. To receive credit for 12 units of Introductory Biology (7.012, 7.013, or 7.014) without enrolling in the subject, you must pass the Biology Advanced Standing Examination administered during Orientation.

Chemistry

No credit is given for the College Board AP Chemistry exam. To receive credit for 12 units of 5.111, Principles of Chemical Science, without enrolling in the subject, you must pass the Advanced Placement (Advanced Standing) exam administered during Orientation.

Computer Science

No credit is given for either the Computer Science A or the Computer Science AB exam.

Mathematics

For a score of 4 or 5 on the BC Calculus examination, credit is given for 12 units of 18.01, Calculus I. For scores lower than 4, no credit is given.

If you earn 18.01 credit and then take 18.01A (a variation of 18.01) for review purposes, the 12 units of credit initially given for 18.01 will convert to 3 units of general elective credit. You will also receive 12 units of credit for a passing grade in 18.01A.

If you take 18.014 (calculus with theory), your 18.01 credit will convert to 9 units of general elective credit, and 12 units of credit is given for passing 18.014.

Although no credit is given for the Calculus B exam, a score of 4 or 5 places you into the accelerated Calculus sequence 18.01A/18.02A. A score of 4 or 5 on the AB portion of the BC Calculus exam offers the same placement as the regular Calculus AB exam.

Physics

For a score of 5 on both parts of the Physics C exam, credit will be given for 12 units of 8.01, Physics I, and you may enroll in subject 8.02 or 8.022 (Physics II). No credit is given for the Physics B exam. For scores lower than 5, no credit is awarded.

If you earn 8.01 credit and then enroll in 8.012 (the advanced version of 8.01), the 12 units of credit initially given for 8.01 will convert to 6 units of general elective credit. You will also receive 12 units of credit for a passing grade in 8.012. 

Communication Requirement

A score of 5 on either the English Language and Composition or English Literature and Composition exam places you in the "CI-H/CI-HW Required" category without taking the Freshman Essay Evaluation (FEE). You are still required to take a Communication-Intensive subject (CI-HW or CI-H) your first year as part of the Communication Requirement. You do, however, have a wider range of Communication-Intensive subjects to choose from than students who do not either submit a score of 5 or demonstrate competency in the FEE. Students with scores lower than 5 on either exam should take the FEE or plan to complete a CI-HW subject.

Humanities Arts, and Social Sciences

Advanced Placement credit cannot be used to satisfy any part of the HASS Requirement. If you receive a score of 5 on the College Board Advanced Placement exams listed below, you will receive 9 general elective units for each exam, applicable as unrestricted electives only. For example, a score of 5 on the AP Spanish Language exam and a score of 5 on the AP U.S. History exam would earn 18 total units of general elective credit. 

For scores lower than 5, no credit is awarded.

  • Art History
  • Chinese Language/Culture
  • Economics—Macro
  • Economics—Micro
  • English Language
  • English Literature
  • European History
  • French Language
  • French Literature
  • German Language
  • Government & Politics—US
  • Government & Politics—Comparative
  • Human Geography
  • Italian Language and Literature
  • Japanese Language/Culture
  • Latin Literature
  • Latin Vergil
  • Music Theory
  • Psychology
  • Spanish Language
  • Spanish Literature
  • US History
  • World History

Note that no credit is given for the AP Statistics exam.

See the HASS page of this site for details on first-year HASS subject offerings.

For More Information

Direct questions regarding MIT’s policies and procedures on credit for Advanced Placement scores to ap@mit.edu or 617-253-6771.

 

 

 

 
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