I think you are misreading the table. The low percentages represent kids who got ID diploma/total number of graduate including all kids (IB and non IB). The question is what % of kids who are in IB diploma program complete the program which is what 76% in my earlier post indicate. |
Thanks for one of the few balanced and noncombative posts on this thread! Regarding the bold material -- This depends on the individual student. I know two families that each pupil placed two students in IB high schools (all four kids were assigned originally to AP high schools in FCPS). Three of those students are now in U.S. colleges (senior, junior and sophomore) and one graduated two years ago. All four did the full IB diploma, and all have said that they felt IB prepared them very well for the demands of college-level work, especially participating in seminars and doing lengthy research and writing without being daunted. I also know a couple of kids who did a ton of high school AP and were well prepared for college too. Really, around here, a kid can do either and gain a lot from it if he or she puts enough into it. |
My DC was a National AP scholar recipient and an IB diploma recipient. I can tell you being a National AP Scholar was easier and, at least for us, far less meaningful. IB diploma represented everything DC had worked for - all those nights and weekends trying to better himself. AP stuff was just taking multiple tests and scoring reasonable well. |
I think you are ignoring the table and simply asking a question more to your own liking. Who cares if 100% of the IB diploma candidates get an IB diploma if we're paying through the nose for an under-subscribed program? |
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| I've always understood that Asian families in FCPS place a tremendous value on education and college admissions. In 2014, 4508 Asian students took AP exams, and only 694 took IB exams. Basically, the ratio of AP schools to IB schools is 2:1 in FCPS, and the ratio of Asian students taking AP vs. IB is more like 6:1. I find that fairly compelling empirical evidence of where the area students seeking the greatest academic challenges tend to gravitate, and it's not IB. |
This post is laughable (and mildly offensive). |
IB does have a certain SWPL quality to it, doesn't it? Not surprised that Asians in FCPS strongly prefer the AP schools. |
| I am Asian, I love IB. |
There are exceptions to every general rule, but three that hold true in FCPS are that higher-performing schools generally have AP, Asians outperform other ethnic groups, and more Asians enroll in AP than IB. But, maybe an IB diploma will be useful in Singapore. |
| What I don't understand is why people get all worked up about this? If you don't like the IB or AP program at your base school you can people place. Both programs have pluses and minuses. Shouldn't we be grateful that students are at least offered a choice? Instead you've got people yapping bizarre things like, "AP is better because more Asians choose it?" I mean honestly, can't we all just accept that different people want different things and there's no right answer except the program that's right for your kid? |
It's an observation that the group that has the highest achievement levels in FCPS has a strong, demonstrable preference for AP. Where were you when people were yapping "IB is harder, IB is better"? |
By that logic, it is neither IB or AP that is better. It's Kumon. I know it all made sense in your head, but do you really not see how ridiculous it is once it's typed out? |
Forget it. The idiot doesn't get it. |
| I've read most of this thread and it makes no sense. If IB were even close to being as rigorous as AP, why wouldn't FCPS put it in the schools with more high-performing kids, not the low-SES schools? Either it's not as hard as some people like to claim or FCPS made a big blunder. It just doesn't add up. if I were OP, it would take me about 10 seconds to decide to stick with Langley. |