Those are just the required subjects, not required APs. |
| As an FYI, at least Cal and UCLA also looked at weighted GPA uncapped per college confidential and other online sources. Not sure how they handle non CA HS honors in the uncapped weighting. |
| for what it's worth, last year UCLA came out March 18. My family is waiting again for 4 UC decisions this year. OOS |
Thanks for the info. |
Correction from OOS - there were two emails. First with what you showed and then another.. First-Year decisions will be released approximately late afternoon / early evening (Pacific time) on March 30, 2023, via the MAP@Berkeley portal. All decisions will be released on or before March 30, 2023. When decisions become available, you will receive an email notifying you to log in to MAP@Berkeley |
| Looking at the UC requirements they specify geometry is required. If you took geometry in middle school do you just get that listed on a special transcript? |
"Academic history Here you'll enter the courses and grades from all schools you've attended while in high school. If you took high school-level math or language other than English in middle school (7th and 8th grades), you will have a chance to report those courses and grades in this section." (https://admission.universityofcalifornia.edu/how-to-apply/applying-as-a-freshman/filling-out-the-application.html) |
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| Query for anyone with kids in CA high schools. Are they as crazy about APs as the MD and VA public schools? Meaning, do students regularly graduate with 10-12 AP classes as is often reported on this board? I am wondering if the cap on grade bumps in the UC system is resulting in slowing the AP arms race in CA. |
Good question. Yes, I think this will be the result. Which confuses me because they also state they want students taking the most rigorous course load. So how can they ask students to take the most rigorous course load and yet cap AP’s at the same time? I believe the cap is new? We will see how it plays out. My kid is at a public high school in CA. Every school is different. Ours is a “high achieving” school (whatever that means), but also limits AP classes. There are no honors classes for 9th graders except for math. You can only take one AP class as a 10th grader (AP bio). Juniors and Seniors can take as many as they want, as long as they qualify. |
With some rare exceptions, this is closer to my DC's experience at a DC application high school. No APs in 9th, one in 10th that everyone takes, and then unlimited in 11th and 12th (but limited by availability, the electives such as Psych, Environmental Science, Human Geo are all seniors because the 11th graders cannot get into them). My DC will graduate with 8 APs, which is normal/strong for her school but seems low by Montogomery Country and Northern VA standards. |
We have a similar experience as well. My son is in a CA public school. They don't have any honors/AP courses in the 9th grade. But there is no such restriction from 10th grade onwards. But they limit you to one science and one math course every year. They also have conditional exclusions -- if you take course A, you can't take course B -- to prevent overloading of AP courses. But even with all this, kids manage to do 10-12 AP courses by the time they graduate. I am personally against such school level restrictions unless they are enforced nationally. These kind of artificial restrictions only disadvantages the kids since colleges look at all of them through the same lens. |
My kid goes to private. Her school only offers 2 APs (foreign language). Otherwise, honors is highest. You have to test into honors. You cannot just sign up. |
My kid is at a San Francisco private. They don’t offer AP’s. But UC knows what courses are on offer. I can see all my son’s classes on UC’s drop down menu for filling in A-G high school classes on the application. They know which classes are honors too. |
| I’m confused. If the UC schools don’t look at test scores or 9th grade grades, and limit the number of AP/equivalent “lifts” that each kid can get to 8, then how do they actually select students? Because it seems to me that there would be a large number of applicants with unweighted 4.0s (or near enough) who also have taken the maximum allowed APs. So how do they pick a class? |