| How do colleges account for this? Same high school may have two teachers teaching the same subject who grade very differently. |
| Grades are not comparable. They just give a general idea compared to other kids from the same school over the course of the 4 years. I think class selection is more important now with no SATs. |
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Do you seriously think colleges can know which Brit Lit teacher is an easy grader at your school?
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| Counselors clue them in sometimes. |
I was going to say this---it could come out in the counselor rec or through conversations with college guidance. I know that our school (private school) will tell all college reps that come through that the honors precalc is a weed-out, beast of a class. Something like 10% of kids get an A in it and getting a B is doing quite well. |
The counselor letter is literally the most important thing. |
Absolutely frightening if your kid attends a large, high performing public high school where most of the students couldn't pick out their counselor in a police lineup. |
Except that is uniform across the grade. They won’t say teacher X is a harsh grader while teacher Y is all rainbows. |
They don’t. That’s just life unfortunately. |
+1 |
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Most say nothing.
If you get the chance put it in your parent questionnaire |
| Colleges get a sheet from the high schools that tells them things like the breakdown of grades over the senior class...like % of 4.5 % over 4.0 etc. It tells them which schools have lots of grade inflation and which do not. They know that MCPS is basically out of 5 with huge numbers of kids have over 4.0 and 4.5 |
It also has a breakdown of AP exams scores so they can get a feel of the teaching quality.. |
Even class selection isn't comparable because not all schools offer honors/APs/classes that look by their titles to be more rigorous than others. |
This isn’t true when kids couldn’t possibly take every class as a highest possible of a 5 Again misinformation |