My kid got into multiple T10s/20s and an Ivy unhooked. 8 total 2 English, 1 science, 1 math, 4 history Had 4 years of foreign language but year 4- not AP. 5s on all AP exams. The “Easy” ones that don’t care about like environmental science over bio/chem or physics, or stats over calc. The caliber of the AP will matter. One from the cute subjects and more can be in intended major area. |
| ^ core, not cute |
Yes, need to name schools you are interested in and where your kid is coming from. If from top private, many kids have no APs or very few. If from FCPS or MCPS kids often have 10+. |
This. You student’s rigor will be compared to what the school offers and what other students there typically take. Many private schools cap the number of AP classes, and some don’t even offer APs. |
| Mine had 8 AP’s at a private that limits the number of AP’s kids can take. It was enough for several colleges in the T-20 to T-50 range. No merit at any of those. |
UMD actually qualifies. Acceptance is around 40% and same rate for in state and OOS. |
if you already know if the kid is STEM or Humanities, that helps a lot. 2 of the harder APs a year in their area is what matters to most. the business/cs programs dont care about APUSH, and the philiosoph program may give your AP CALC BC a side eye (ie, are they really a philosophy major or are they backdooring us?) |
| Don’t go by acceptance rate. Acceptance rate can depend on a lot of variables- state residency for publics, gender, hooks, major, etc. GA Tech’s acceptance rate is around 35-40% for Georgians and around 10% for everyone else. |
Yeah I don’t get this either. W&M qualifies too. DD got in with 8 including a few easy ones (Gov, APES, CompSci). |
| It is all based on your own school offerings. Look at the school profile and take the courses that show increased rigor as you progress. If your school offers none, that is not held against you. If your school offers 20, then choose thoughtfully. GPA and AP numbers are high school specific. |
| Our son's school doesn't offer AP and many of the top privates (and some publics) are discontinuing their offering. In his school's case, over 40% of graduates end up in Top 25 colleges. Try to take challenging courses (whatever that means in your case), and don't get as caught up on AP count. |
| 10-15, more if possible. It’s super competitive out there. My DD had 16 and was rejected at many schools in the range of 20%-40%. |
Which school? I'm assuming it is public? |
There’s a point of diminishing returns. |
Did she do well in the class and on the test? My one kid was accepted to a 7% acceptance rate school with 12 and the other a 14% acceptance school with 10. Sounds like essays and/or LORs weren’t great…or her GPA was not good. |