The RM IB magnet program is a county-wide magnet program. Just be aware that the student would do exactly the same things for the IB Diploma Programme in 11th grade and 12th grade in the RM IB magnet program as at B-CC, because it's the same IB Diploma Programme. |
| I think the question is: does IB offer an advantage in college admissions compared to AP? Are they recognized equally? I thought IB was more work for the same amount of recognition? |
but as stated in previous posts: RMIB has Pre-IB classes only open to IB magnet students. BCC does not. The IB diploma rate at RM is higher than at BCC. |
yes there is. See above post about RMIB. |
It's also more money. IB tests this year are $119, AP tests are $97. And more writing. |
Those aren't "pre-IB" classes, they are special classes for students who were accepted into the RMIB magnet program. |
yes, and it's generally called "pre-IB" classes since it can only be taken by IB magnet students. |
someone once stated that IB is depth and AP is breadth. I'm finding that this is true. For example, in IB world history they take a couple of topics and go in depth, whereas in AP world history, they cover the span of world history. And yea, a ton of writing, even in STEM classes. They have to write a research paper for almost all classes. As for colleges, the IB classes themselves don't mean much. But the IB diploma probably does. It's especially useful if your kid decides to apply to foreign colleges. |
People can call the classes anything they want, but the fact is that the classes are not part of the IB Diploma Programme. |
So essentially it's "magnet English" or whatever, just like Blair or Wheaton would have magnet-specific math or science classes to prepare them for APs or more advanced classes in the upper grades. I think one reason central office is cracking down on the "pre-IB" designation is that those classes aren't sanctioned by the IB organization. Unless it's a proper Middle Years course, it's not officially tied to, or aligned with, the IB curriculum. So they technically shouldn't be using the IB name. And no, Einstein, at least, isn't a MYP school. |
There are no specific pre-IB classes that are part of the IBDP or IBCP program. There is however a Middle Years Program in 9th and 10th grade which might be what PP is talking about. MYP preps students for Full IB in 11th and 12th grade. For example, since Seneca Valley is a wall-to-wall IB school, students in 9th and 10th grade have the MYP framework embedded in their classes, and they submit a personal MYP project in 10th grade. At the end of 10th grade, students decide if they want to go for the full IB diploma (IBCP or IBDP) or take some IB classes here or there or none at all starting in 11th grade. Not sure how it works at the other schools but this is how it works at SVHS. |
Say what? How do you know this and how can we push back against this? What would the alternative model for MYP IB classes look like? |
Ok, that makes more sense. If it's not an official MYP Course then it shouldn't have the name and the cohort-exclusivity attached to it. |
Yes, with IB it's the diploma that distinguishes you, not the individual courses. That's the opposite for AP, where the individual courses (and corresponding exams scores) are all that matter. The impact of the IB Diploma for acceptance rates range from anywhere from a 10-40% increase depending on the school. |
I'm the PP and I know because an administrator told me when I asked what classes are available to incoming 9th graders. This administrator seemed genuinely frustrated, and I probably caught them in a bad moment (I have an older child at the school). |