It's a year ahead of on-level, which is what most MCPS college-bound kids are. Kids who had compacted math in 4th and 5th (which is a lot of kids) get to Precalc in 10th. |
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Sorry to hijack this but my kid is at an independent school in MoCo. She wants to be able to take AB Calc next year but needs to take pre-calc over the summer to do so. Does anyone have any suggestions of where she could do that?
Thanks. |
| My child took an AP Calc and AP Stats his junior year. There is no right or wrong answer here. Perhaps ask his current math teacher? |
Doesn’t count. Still needs 4 years taken while in high school to graduate. |
| The high school math teachers aren’t going to know about what colleges are looking for, especially for a student who isn’t interested in a math or stem focused major. |
Sidwell and Landon both offer Pre-Cal. Just as a warning though it's not up to par with a full year class. I'd recommend making sure you have a tutor next year to fill in the gaps. |
So what did they take Senior year? |
| Is there a typical math path that a selective liberal arts college looks for? Is BC Calc necessary for admission? And what about a second year of Calc? |
| My humanities oriented DC took calc AB junior year, calc BC senior, this gave her a strong background to complete college work. She ended at a school with a math requirement regardless of AP credit. Going straight to BC takes dedication, it's possible, but more for the highly motivated math student, there's overlap in the classes, so BC moves very fast. AP Stat, is good for a humanities student. Depending on the teacher it can be as much of a writing and reasoning class, as computation. It fills the math requirement, of course, but doesn't do a lot to keep math skill honed. It's more of a math elective, and not very challenging as it's a low level college intro stretched to year length. My younger DC, who is more math oriented, is taking it now and doesn't enjoy it, says the (mostly) seniors in the class are noticeably unmotivated. |
Correct! It's absurd because the content goal for graduation is algebra. It drives me crazy that the entire school system is oriented towards things my DC learned in middle school. You used to be able to waive the requirement if you took a full year of calculus. |
For science or engineering oriented students, calculus is generally expected at the most competitive colleges if your high school offers it. Calc BC is the equivalent of first year college calculus and covers both differential and integral calculus. Calc AB is mostly just differential calculus and is generally equivalent to just first semester college calculus. So taking AB and then BC in high school is not really taking two years of calculus - more like taking 2 years in high school to cover 1 year of college math. A post calculus class would be linear algebra, differential equations, or multivariate calculus. While many STEM students at the most selective colleges take those classes in high school, there are big advantages for non-savants to retaking them in college. Some students choose to take AP stats after calculus. AP stats is a non-calculus based class that is not really college material at the most competitive colleges. It is perfectly fine for students who are clearly humanities oriented who can take more advanced classes in their fields of interest. But I think the majority of humanities students at the most competitive colleges took calculus in high school these days. |
But do these humanities students need BC or is AB ok? |
AB is fine. One other option, if you're in MCPS, is a course called Calc with Apps, that's a non AP intro to calculus. Taking that junior year followed by Calc AB, would ensure a strong senior schedule without pushing too far into math that's not of interest. AB is enough background that college options wouldn't be limited if interests or requirements change. |
Well, "on level" is actually ahead. Not too long ago, and still in many places, Algebra I in 9th was on level. Pre-calc. was on level for 12th. |
Now MCPS's goal is to have students complete Algebra I by 8th grade. |