I think the plan changed after they were sued. |
This just isn’t true |
I have one public and one private child. My public school child has loaded up on APs since 10th grade. He never bothered to take the exams. It was only used as a tool to show rigor and pump up his weighted GPA. He was accepted Columbia. He basically got into all his top schools. Im probably going to pull my middle schooler for public high school and follow the same strategy. |
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That’s very interesting. My c/o 2021 hs grad submitted all those test scores, and their private REQUIRES students to sit the exam for each AP class.
Is he hs c/o 2022? I wonder what hs. Tough admit, Columbia. Congratulations and good luck to him |
It is at least through next year, according to my kid. He is sitting for AP tests this May and has AP classes on the class request form he recently completed for next year. And, his teachers talk about continuing to teach AP classes, according to him. |
Well, public schools do not pay for all students to take the exams, and the colleges do not care as much as you think they do about the score. |
| I am shocked that colleges don’t use the tests as confirmation that the kid can actually learn the material. Seems like an excellent weed out metric. |
A ballsier move would be to take the AP tests without taking the classes. |
Well they cost $90+/exam, for starters. |
There is financial aid fee reductions for tests. |
Only for FARMs. |
Never knew private school parents were so obsessed with standardized tests. |
the fact that they don't should tell you something about whether AP tests are useful or just a scam. If AP classes are designed as college equivalents, then you should wonder why kids in MoCo take APUSH in 9th grade. |
Correct. Bargain for 4 credits or to show some level of mastery of material. MCPS pressures all its UrM to take free subsidized AP tests. Regardless of level of preparedness and eventual outcomes. |
How does that show anything about the student’s work ethic or rigor? |