When take AP Calculus? (11th or 12th grade)

Anonymous
What % of your school’s high school grads:

Take AP Calc AB or BS junior year?
Take AP Calc senior year?
Don’t take AP Calc at all?

We need to compare to our current situation we are relocating away from, and assume it’s the same breakdown given reputations.

The above stats should iron out any integrated class algebra/geometry curriculum or allowing two math classes freshman year (geo and alg 2).
Anonymous
I would want it over with junior year and on my transcript. Done.
Anonymous
mine took Calc BC as a junior and IB HL math as senior
Anonymous
SWW has many students doubling up Geo & Algebra 2 in 9th grade, so I'd imagine that large cluster takes Pre-calc next, then their AP Calc junior year.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:SWW has many students doubling up Geo & Algebra 2 in 9th grade, so I'd imagine that large cluster takes Pre-calc next, then their AP Calc junior year.


Really not recommended to take geo and algebra 2 simultaneously. Why not take geo in 8th grade?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:SWW has many students doubling up Geo & Algebra 2 in 9th grade, so I'd imagine that large cluster takes Pre-calc next, then their AP Calc junior year.


Terrible to try to take 2 math classes the same year and double up. Better to track earlier and that is the issue in DCPS middle school is majority don’t even have a geometry class in 8th so kids are forced to do above for any acceleration
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:SWW has many students doubling up Geo & Algebra 2 in 9th grade, so I'd imagine that large cluster takes Pre-calc next, then their AP Calc junior year.


Really not recommended to take geo and algebra 2 simultaneously. Why not take geo in 8th grade?


Because DCPS middle schools don’t have geometry classes in 8th. The math offerrings are really poor and disappointing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:SWW has many students doubling up Geo & Algebra 2 in 9th grade, so I'd imagine that large cluster takes Pre-calc next, then their AP Calc junior year.


Terrible to try to take 2 math classes the same year and double up. Better to track earlier and that is the issue in DCPS middle school is majority don’t even have a geometry class in 8th so kids are forced to do above for any acceleration


They are totally disparate classes and topics and this has been in place for over 10 years. DCPS.
Anonymous
MCPS collapses Alg 1, geometry, and alg 2 into two Integrated Math classes so they have a good solution for getting calculus by 10th or 11th grade, for high flyers.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:MCPS collapses Alg 1, geometry, and alg 2 into two Integrated Math classes so they have a good solution for getting calculus by 10th or 11th grade, for high flyers.


What? No they don't. They have a speculatice future plan that they haven't figured out yet

Anonymous
You can take AP Cal earlier by 10th grade in Basis and DCI because they offer integrated math and acceleration.

No DCPS middle to high school that offers this much of an advance track that I know of.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:SWW has many students doubling up Geo & Algebra 2 in 9th grade, so I'd imagine that large cluster takes Pre-calc next, then their AP Calc junior year.


Really not recommended to take geo and algebra 2 simultaneously. Why not take geo in 8th grade?


Because DCPS middle schools don’t have geometry classes in 8th. The math offerrings are really poor and disappointing.


Deal does
Anonymous
Since we’re discussing integrated math, I thought it worth noting that parents with experience with that curriculum in a public school system, rather than an opt-in charter, posting earlier today on the college page, absolutely hate it:

We’re in a moderately competitive public school in southern California, and the math instruction has been very very frustrating. The integrated math system puts you on a super accelerated path or just the regular path. There's no in between, which would be perfect for our kids. Our oldest survived and is headed to HYP. We've learned to navigate the horrible curriculum and crossing fingers it works out for our younger DCs. But I am deeply disappointed that my oldest is turned off by math, even if he's pursuing a major that has nothing to do with math.


Bay Area poster here, same here. Both kids are strong at math, though only one is pursuing STEM. We also found IM really ridiculous. I also can see how kids graduate with no math skills. In DD’s IM3 class the majority of the grade was homework and quizzes. Quizzes were group quizzes. The teacher made a point of making sure a math smart kid was in each group. The other kids would just let the smart kid do all the problems. Homework was never checked, just stamped that you had it. Tests were made up of the exact same questions on the group quizzes, retakes available and same test for afternoon classes or make ups so basically designed to support cheating. …Most (all) of the successful, high stat kids at our school either learn at home on their own using online resources or a parent, take DE courses during the summer or do Russian math.

[Integrated math] truly is Frankenmath designed to inflate grades and deflate skills.


https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/60/1327108.page
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Since we’re discussing integrated math, I thought it worth noting that parents with experience with that curriculum in a public school system, rather than an opt-in charter, posting earlier today on the college page, absolutely hate it:

We’re in a moderately competitive public school in southern California, and the math instruction has been very very frustrating. The integrated math system puts you on a super accelerated path or just the regular path. There's no in between, which would be perfect for our kids. Our oldest survived and is headed to HYP. We've learned to navigate the horrible curriculum and crossing fingers it works out for our younger DCs. But I am deeply disappointed that my oldest is turned off by math, even if he's pursuing a major that has nothing to do with math.


Bay Area poster here, same here. Both kids are strong at math, though only one is pursuing STEM. We also found IM really ridiculous. I also can see how kids graduate with no math skills. In DD’s IM3 class the majority of the grade was homework and quizzes. Quizzes were group quizzes. The teacher made a point of making sure a math smart kid was in each group. The other kids would just let the smart kid do all the problems. Homework was never checked, just stamped that you had it. Tests were made up of the exact same questions on the group quizzes, retakes available and same test for afternoon classes or make ups so basically designed to support cheating. …Most (all) of the successful, high stat kids at our school either learn at home on their own using online resources or a parent, take DE courses during the summer or do Russian math.

[Integrated math] truly is Frankenmath designed to inflate grades and deflate skills.


https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/60/1327108.page


Yeah better to just do the lowest math track you could possibly do in one of the weakest school districts in the county. Never change dcps. You consistently shoot for the sub basement.
Anonymous
Geometry by 8th is considered the lower track in math in Moco, Arlington, and Fairfax. Yet it is the highest math track offered at the strongest school in dcps. Pathetic.
post reply Forum Index » DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Message Quick Reply
Go to: