So they can lead a normal life? |
Good example of an intelligent parent. |
| Umm. You can still take 2 AP's a year in public school. You don't need to go to private. In fact, if you did that every year, you'd graduate with 8 AP classes total which to me is more than high enough to show you are ready for college. |
Me too. Graduated from NCS in 96. This was pretty normal. |
| I only had 6 periods a day in high school, but took 5 APs junior and senior year (6th period was mandatory sports team) and took 2 college courses every summer. I graduated from college in 5 semesters and saved $60k. Worth it. (This was early 2000s at a public school). |
| my sophomore will have 5 IB classes and 1 AP class junior year. All of his friends are doing pretty much the same - some more AP than IB, depending on their program. |
Yup. |
Yes, but your GPA relative to other kids in the school who take 6 would be much lower because of the weighting. Also, colleges will compare kids from the same school and look at the rigor of the schedule. A private that limits kids to 2 APs per year could still have a stellar reputation, and OP's kid would be compared to kids who also only took 2 APs. |
+1. It was stressful, but I dealt with it, and dealing with it was what made my life easier forever afterward. I learned to manage my time, how to study efficiently, and how to deal with stress. This kid just wants to blame others. |
So why doesn't the kid go to a less competitive college? |
But they're graded at high speed by a stable of people who aren't all college professors and who need the money more than they need to decompress at the end of the school year. |
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]6/year or 6/HS (4 yrs)?[/quote]
The blog post pasted by the OP was from a FCPD senior who said his guidance counselor told him to take 6 APs his senior year. I think 6 in high school is low to average now. [/quote] No it isn't. Look at the stats. |
| FCPS parent here ~ high school total was 3 AP's for one, 0 for another. Both went to "highly selective" public Us though not in Va - in part due to the AP rate race. We decided early in their HS career to look elsewhere for better results, and a more sane family life. |
| This whole post is confusing because some people are talking about AP's per year and some people are talking about AP's over the course of four years. |
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I graduated in 2007, and I believe took 1 AP class my sophomore year, 3 my junior year, and 8 my senior year (plus one AP exam that I studied for myself because the class wasn't offered). They're not all year-long classes. Our government, economics and comparative politics AP classes were just 1 semester. I never really felt stressed out in high school, but I definitely did way more work in high school than in college or grad school. I ended up starting college with more than 60 hours of credit (some of that was non-AP, like testing out of intro Spanish). GREAT way to avoid paying so much $$$ for college.
The annoying thing with AP classes is there's still a lot of busy work and silly assignments, but at least you're actually learning a lot of interesting content. I wish that they would structure AP coursework more like an actual college class-- midterm, maybe a paper or two, and a final, or a weekly lab, midterm, and a final. It's all the dumb busy work that's "stressful." |