"Outdated browsers" prevented thousands of high schoolers from submitting AP exams
With the havoc caused by the coronavirus pandemic, Advanced Placement (AP) students have had to take their exams at home. But due to a nationwide technical glitch, many students' tests are not being counted, putting their college credit and final grades at risk.
AP courses are college-level classes for high school students. At the end of the academic year, students take a cumulative exam, and those who score high enough can potentially earn college credit for the class. College Board offers AP courses in English, social sciences, math, computer science, arts, history, and sciences.
Students took to Twitter to share photos and videos of what happened wen they tried to submit their recent exams.
One student, sounding exasperated and emotional, showed the "submit" button on her physics test simply not working. An on-screen timer shows her struggling to upload an image of her handwritten answers with just about a minute and a half to spare before the test automatically ended.
can’t believe i studied for hours and finished ALL the questions just for it not to allow me to submit :( @CollegeBoard #apphysics1 pic.twitter.com/y5Rejqzd9e
— dani 🕊 (@daniellelomee) May 14, 2020
In other videos, you can hear that same student crying as she has to sign up to retake the exam. More than a dozen students commented on her post, saying the same thing happened to them.
A student who took the English literature and composition test also posted a video of the submit button not working. The student had written a lengthy response to a question and checked to make sure he met all of the submission requirements. The video shows that when time ran out, he was directed to a page that read "we did not receive your response" and provided a link for him to make up the test.
Hey @CollegeBoard, I had trouble submitting my AP English Literature exam; the video shows that I was completely finished, with the format requirements met. I’m beyond upset that you’re making students who had trouble submitting their essays sign up for a retake. pic.twitter.com/05y2EJdaay
— john (@john46669629) May 13, 2020
Many students noted they have taken several AP courses, and thus have several more exams to take over the next few weeks. Because of the glitches they have already experienced, they claimed they will have to retake all of those exams.
@CollegeBoard @AP_Trevor PLEASE HELP ME. I’ve taken both physics exams this morning and neither would let me submit my answers! I’ve tried multiple methods, did the demo multiple times before and it’s sending this error message. I have 10 tests in the next 2 weeks! Left on hold! pic.twitter.com/Gw0vzoEM4n
— DarthSammyJ (@G935Ocho) May 11, 2020
The technical issues started on May 11, the very first day of AP testing. College board said that approximately 2% of the 50,000 students — or roughly 1,000 students — who took that day's AP Physics C: Mechanics exam experienced difficulties when they tried to submit their answers. The organization tweeted "we anticipated that a small percentage of students would encounter technical difficulties," which is why they have a makeup window scheduled in June.
Approximately 50,000 students took today's AP Physics C: Mechanics exam. 98% submitted their responses, while approximately 2% encountered issues attempting to submit their response.
— The College Board (@CollegeBoard) May 11, 2020
Given the wide variety of devices, browsers, and versions students are using, we anticipated that a small percentage of students would encounter technical difficulties, and we have a makeup window in June so students have another opportunity to test.
— The College Board (@CollegeBoard) May 11, 2020
Two days later, College Board tweeted "more than 99% of students successfully submitted" their exams, and that "outdated browsers were a primary cause" for those who had issues.
While more than 99% of students successfully submitted their AP Exam responses today, some who didn't told us they had trouble cutting and pasting their responses. We took a closer look and found that outdated browsers were a primary cause of these challenges.
— The College Board (@CollegeBoard) May 13, 2020
College Board has published a troubleshooting guide to help students through their exams. They did not immediately return CBS News' request for comment.