I mean, if your school is sending in apps with 12 APS taken, by most, a person with 6 wouldn't be seen as most rigorous. And we are in FCPS which doesn't rank, but I found out this year that they do the % bands, so they might as well rank. They've told us for years no ranking but that was BS. It will be quite obvious where my kid is based off of GPA percentile bands. |
Wouldn’t these bands be included in the School Report? Our school lists AP, SAT, and ACT scores in bands but not GPA. Where would one find that info? |
Ummm no |
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Dean J of UVA said they don’t care about the box - they evaluate the transcripts themselves.
My Mcps counselor said my kid with 8 APs would qualify because they took an AP math. It was Calc AB. But I suspect they might check it even for AP Stats. |
I didn’t quite get a straight answer whether you had to do an AP in every core area, but that would be my guess. |
Not really. There’s no way to discern ranking between peer students. Colleges don’t bother trying when schools don’t rank. They just judge their transcript. |
Let’s say there are 520 senior kids in a fcps. The school profile will say the GPA range for the class is bw 4.59 and a 1.26. Students who apply and have a 4.5+ will be known to be at the very top. So exact ranking can’t be determined except for the kids with the 4.59 the 1.26…but a general idea of the top and bottom can be. |
I would think it’s obvious that it depends on the school. Every school doesn’t have the same courses. They have to be careful about alienating people at schools that don’t have a lot of APs. |
Yes it will be obvious. They should tell parents the truth. Ours “does not rank and does not check the box” yet the school profile and counselor letter provides all of the details necessary for an AO to easily assess relative rank and rigor. |
| It seems like people don't want their counselors to be transparent. Why not? |
+1 |
What MCPS high school (the context of that response) doesn’t offer at least 1 AP in each of the 5 core areas? I don’t think any fail to do so. |
The college counselor letter will say the most positive thing—top 10% or top few or top overall GPA (current val) even if they do not send GPA tiers. Plus, all top colleges including UVa track previous admits, WL and rejects from each Hs from previous years (in other words, the college version of scoir or naviance, or some colleges have their own data tracker) That alone is enough data to have a good idea of general relative rank |
What happens though when a class has an outlier kid? Two years ago the highest GPA at my kid's school was a 4.8+. Last year it was 4.6+. There are always a few kids at his school who skip ahead in math so that they are taking calculus freshman year, though the school has restrictions on taking APs freshman and sophomore years. There is an outlier kid in my son's junior class this year and my kid's already wondering how that affects other kids (like him) who will have 4.5+ - 4.6+ (more normal for his school). |