Wildly incorrect. 5's still only account for roughly 10% of all AP test takers (sometimes as low as 8% or as high as 13%) |
Or maybe the kid is more interested in taking AP Environmental Science rather than taking a second year of Biology, Chemistry and Physics (you have to take the honors version before the AP version at my Dc’s school)… |
My son got all 5s with no prep. My daughter had a teacher leave mid year and this person was replaced with a teacher who had never taught the subject before. She got a 4. |
You missed the point. Yes, some highly intelligent kids take AP Enviro sci. But, the reason the pass rate is so low compared to much, much harder courses is because the MAJORITY of kids taking environmental science are looking for an easy class and the other AP courses are too tough. I know smart kids very interested in climate that take environmental science, but the vast majority of kids looking to fill their schedules with the most rigorous courses (not just taking an easy one to inflate the gpa with a 0.5 bump) don't have room for environmental science. Less intelligent kids taking the exam means low pass rate. Understand? |
Colleges know this too^^ |
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DC who is now a first year college student
10th grade: comp sci A (5), world hist (5) 11th grade: us hist (3), chem (5), calc bc (5), eng lang (5) 12th grade: music (5), biology (5), physics C: mech (5), physics C: elec/mag (5), stats (5), micro econ (5), macro econ (5) SAT = 1530 |
How did he do in admissions? Where did he get in and where was he rejected? |
at Cornell engineering with air force rotc hssp. applied all engineering. Accepted: Northwestern, UVA, VaTech, GaTech, Case Western, UIUC, Delaware, Rose Hulman, Rensselaer Rejected: Rice, Columbia, Princeton, UPenn, Duke Waitlisted: UMich, Brown, Carnegie, Vanderbilt |
| My kid got 5s on 10 APs. Including Physics mech and Physic elec/mag. Had to do a bit of self studying for most since school doesn’t have APs. 1580 SATs. |
I'd say the 10+ AP tests with all 5s is most likely higher than the percentage of 1600/36. AP tests measure what you learned over the course. A good AP teacher teaches the material but also ensure the students will do well on the test. My own 1480/8 AP kid got all 5s and one 4 (and that was on AP CS principles, which did not matter as they already had a 5 on CS A---so they chose not to do the "project work" for the test as they were a senior and it literally did not matter). Otherwise, they would of had all 5s. I suspect there are many other "smarter" kids who could have easily gotten all 5s as well. |
Exactly! AP ES is taken by 9th/10th graders wanting to try an AP (or anyone wanting "to try AP course). AP CalcBC is taken by kids who are 1-3 years ahead in math since ES/MS. They've always been ahead in math and are likely talented at math. You don't just get to Calc BC by deciding to take it Junior or senior year. So if 95% of the kids taking the course are highly talented and advanced in Math, one would assume they'd do well on the test |
But that is not true. What PP stated is extremely accurate. Think about it. You don't get to take Calc BC without being advanced at math for years (since 5/6th grade easily). So you've got the brightest and best of kids who have been like that since ES and now they are taking an AP test junior/senior year of HS. I'd expect the scores to be significantly higher than for AP Precalc or Ap HUG. Fact is many APs are known for being easier and also taken by 9/10th graders. And those often have lower scores across the board. |
And a good teacher (and prep online/books) will teach you just that. Much easier to prep for an AP test than to get a 1600. |
Same take the regular Bio/Chem/Phsyics before AP exists at our school as well. But a junior/senior who is thinking "oh I want to majoring ES" is more likely to take AP Chem/BIo/Physics because they know they will need those for their major. So they will attempt to take 1-3 of those and get actual college credit for those prerequisites. Knowing that most likely the AP ES will not get them out of the intro to ES course at their college---many want you to take your actual major reqs at that school |
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Don’t u get the senior year AP exam results AFTER the college admissions decisions are made? That alone makes them iffy indicators of admissions.
That said, my kid did fairly well on AP exams, but the only thing that raised eyebrows was getting 5 on the exams in 2 different foreign languages. |