Very common for 9th graders is MCPS to take AP Gov. Not just in IB schools. |
My 9th grader took APUSH this year - Ann Arundel public school (I think it is county-wide). |
Huh? Because she didn't take a practice test she has anxiety or second guesses herself? They don't do practice tests at our school; but they "practice" with prompts throughout the year and their teachers are focused on preparing them for the exam. So students do have some idea of what to expect, especially after they've taken their first AP exam. Regardless, my point was simple: you never really know for sure how a student is going to perform on a given test. So all of those "discouraged" students are not likely or guaranteed to "fail." I think it's very unfortunate that they are dissuaded from trying. |
So what misinformation is PP frothing to spread? |
My kid's college does not cap, though requires 4s for almost everything and a 5 for AP Lit. |
It's really weird for a kid to have such a distorted view of their performance that they got a 5 but thought there was no way they would get a 5. The college board released material should give you a pretty good idea of how you are likely to do. My kids have collectively taken 16 APs. Not a single result was a surprise. Most schools don't pay for AP exams. Many schools also strongly gatekeep access to AP courses. I'm not sure why you're hating on Basis, which gives kids pretty broad access to AP courses even in 9th grade and pays for all of the ones that the kids look on track to pass, rather than hating on the majority of publics, which severely restrict APs in 9th and 10th and don't pay for any of them. The kids who aren't allowed to enroll in the AP class at all or who can't afford the pricetag for each test are surely feeling more "discouraged" than the Basis kids. |
You may know Basis but I do not think you know all the lowly publics of which you speak. Don’t try to speak for them. -public school parent at a school that pays for the tests and doesn’t appear to gatekeep. |
Ironically the Basis poster’s underlying point was correct: who takes AP exams is seriously affected by who might pass AP exams. Sometimes it’s the school who makes that determination and sometimes it’s the student. Sometimes that determination is made shortly before the exam and sometimes it’s made before the student registers for the class. But there are such massive selection effects that there’s no reason to expect scores to be distributed in a bell curve. |