If you take the most rigorous classes at an IB high school then you might as well get the diploma, it’s not a lot of work beyond that. |
| IB DP versus just courses? It is worth it if your kid is not spiky in an EC or is generally has weak EC. In this case, they will get structure for well balanced EC. If they are spiky they should just take the courses, and then they can really focus on their sport/debate/robotics whatever. |
Just because you did it doesn’t mean everyone else has to. Grow up. |
Seriously, AO will look at the course composition if 3 HLs and 3 SLs and say this candidate will do a diploma and is more deserving than others? That’s some copium right there. They’ll just look at the facts in front of them, not infer and guess. |
Just ignore the moron. |
But TOK is a class I thought. So if you do not have TOK on your course record then presumably you are not going for the diploma. |
I have two kids who went through process, one of whom is going to college abroad. Here is my answer based on their experience and that of their friends: a) No, especially not for the US. b) Very much so. I cannot overstate the value here. c) it can do. It depends a bit on the institution, but many will want to see the full diploma. If your main concern is getting into a good US college, then it may not be worth it. But if you’re one of those rare people nowadays that actually cares about your kids’ education, then I would recommend it. |
I mostly agree with this. If applying to colleges outside the US, then doing the full IB can make a big difference in acceptances. |
I doubt UVa cares about the IB diploma. By the time the IB diploma is final, UVA has already sent most of its acceptance letters. UVa fills most if its openings with ED/EA not with RD. UVa is pretty transparent with the # of students accepted at each stage of the admissions process. |
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We decided it is worth it for my senior to-be STEM (non-engineering) major who is also strong in the humanities. I don’t know if it will matter for admissions, but the ‘extra work’ has been great his academic development. It helped that he has a strong cohort of friends in the program - but he had to jump through some hoops to get in all the sciences he wanted. School is his jam though and he likes being challenged to think.
I think our other kid will opt out and just take APs/selected IB classes. He’s just as smart but less academically curious. Different kids, different best choices. |
| To me, not really. The actual diploma program is so stress inducing that it's not worth it nor will it give a significant advantage over someone who just took a bunch of IB classes . At the end of the day, someone taking a bunch of IB classes is in the same classes as the IBDP students except the IBDP students have to do a research extensive long form essay. |
This is a good thing to prepare kids for college. Every former IBDP student I have spoken to said that the IBDP made college a cake walk. And it's better for the kids to be stressed while at home with support at home than when they are away at college. |
| Isn't there an AP Research seminar course? Is it similar to IBDP's Theory of Knowledge (TOK) class? |
Literally every kid my daughter goes to school with who opted for the IBDP wanted out and regretted losing so much of their high school experience the last 2 yrs because of this. |
I live in the hinterlands. I haven't heard of high schools here offering AP Seminar. Or some of the other new courses (AP Pre-Calc). My younger child is taking AP classes but there's no unified perspective or method across AP classes. I have a hard time understanding what added value AP Seminar would have compared to TOK. |