France? |
Accepted to HS magnets. |
Chemistry and Physics are in both categories: physical and earth/space, so if you take both, you're good. |
I don’t need your advice, thank you very much. The fact is that n many countries students do classes similar to MCPS honors chemistry and AP physics 1 in middle school, organic chemistry and biochemistry in middle school. |
| My child took AP Physics 1 in 9th grade and AP Bio in junior year with no prereqs. Took honors chem in 10th and AP Calc in 11th. |
Forgot to add that he thought Honors chemistry was a waste of time and should have taken AP chem. |
I don't know why they make kids take regular chem before AP chem - it wasn't always this way. I think it's related to a sentiment in my school that is used to judge whether a child is "ready" for AP - they will not be accepted in the AP pre-screeners our school has set up if the teacher thinks the student will get a "B". That seems odd to me and likely to cut a lot of students out who could benefit from the challenge. |
Which countries? I've seen a European medical college entrance exam (Romania?) that includes some organic chemistry. But middle school is extreme. |
For science? Which magnets? Seemingly not the SMCS magnets; they have Advanced Science 1/2/3/4 before AP science opportunity. Or do you mean that magnet acceptance earned them clearance to skip into AP science at the non-magnet home school? |
Then you can see for yourself what’s taught in a typical university physics course. That’s more or less AP Physics C Mechanics. https://openstax.org/details/books/university-physics-volume-1/ I sincerely doubt this is what middle schoolers learn in your home country. Keep in mind that in addition to calculus you need to know trigonometry, some vectors, etc. I don’t think this is an appropriate first ever physics class. |
PP you seem to be misunderstanding the poster to whom you are responding who is talking about AP Physics 1, but you are responding with details about AP Physics C AP Physics 1 and AP Physics C (which covers both mechanics and EM) are entirely different classes. C is much harder, requires calculus and is more akin to college physics 101. Physics 1 is algebra-based and covers only the first semester of college physics spread across a whole HS year. I can see how a bright 9th grader could do AP Physics 1. Most HSers won't take AP Physics C so early because concurrent calc is a minimum requirement & most HSers won't take calc until Jr year. |
They want to avoid students getting into the class unprepared, because this slows down the class. AP classes are for students capable of taking college level classes. For science classes like Physics and chemistry you need to be on top of things. Unprepared kids with pushy parents get into these classes and it doesn’t end good for the student. If you need more evidence, take a look at an AP exam from college board for a realistic assessment. |
If your kid is talented and interested in physics it’s more efficient and effective to take one year introductory plus one year of Physics C. The alternative is two years of AP Physics 1 & 2 and in the end you still didn’t do the more rigorous calculus based version so likely you’ll have to take a third year of Physics. Even Physics 1 is not as easy as you imagine, definitely not middle school level anywhere in the world. https://openstax.org/details/books/college-physics-2e/ Only 10% of rest takers are getting a 5 in AP Physics 1. Friendly advice, don’t let your ego screw your child over. Be realistic about what they can or can’t do. Self study is a bad idea in general, a real class is more motivational, it has more resources, there’s real evaluation and testing and ultimately more likely to help in being successful at learning the material. |
An alternative view is that AP Physics 1 + 2 + Calculus-based physics is a far stronger physics education than diving into the math before learning the concepts of Physics. Physics is a science, not a Math class. Learning physics that depends on recently acquired not-highly-mastered math skills is not a winning recipe. |
What HS magnets? Blair is very definitely not an AP program so this would be strongly discouraged. And RM is an IB program so also not AP. |