Well, educating your child is a family endeavor. Parents and students, both have to be committed and prioritize education. Is it easy? No. But you have to do your best for your children and not wing it. So makes sense to say "We", no? Especially, since WE are neither entitled nor will get free handouts. |
You get what you pay for. One high school AP class is NOT equivalent to a college course. I mean if you want to be cheap with your kid's education go ahead. |
How do you know this? |
But it matters for college admissions purposes. Top tier schools expect a kid to take all APs. |
AP's didn't stress me 30+ years ago, and they don't stress my kid now. I was well rounded, and so is my kid. We both care about the world and spend a lot of time in service individually and as a family. This is a student specific question. If it doesn't work for your kid's best interests, don't let him take it, but don't translate that into 'no one' should take these classes. |
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My comparison is not whether AP is a college-level course or not. My kid is 15 and I would hope will be expected to do more when 19.
The relevant comparison is among the various sections offered by the HS. For my child, the honors courses are not challenging, period. She almost never has homework in them and tells me she doesn't learn much. If there were a real Honors course offered that contrasted with AP (for instance, an Honors section that had deep inquiry as an approach rather than the AP study-for-the-test approach, then I'd seriously consider it. In the meantime, I'm disappointed that there aren't more 10th grade AP courses offered (english, etc). |
Ok miss moneybags. This is the Maryland public schools forum. We are all people who by definition who are not picking the most expensive option for school. I had enough AP credits to start college as a sophomore. |
Truth isn't Truth! |
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Take all AP classes if possible. There are good teachers and very very bad teachers.
The best teachers will usually be teaching AP classes. An important key to learning is connecting the dots and making the content relevant to our lives. Rather than thinking of data as isolated points of information it is far easier to understand and remember information if it is part of a sequence or holistic picture. Quality teachers connect all of those dots with pre-existing knowledge (what we learned in past assignments) and casually alluding to future impacts on our lives today. AP course content is more detailed (more facts), but the teachers are more engaged and better at connecting the dots. Using history for example, an AP. US History teacher will teach you practically everything of major consequence that happened in virtually every year in US history. It's sounds monumental, but it's not. It's not because it's a sequentially unfolding story that makes sense in its entirety, because it's a series of cause and effect stories. In regular US History classes the assumption is that the students are either uninterested or unable to process that quantity of information. The result of this teaching methodology is that students are taught primarily the major events in US history which translates into the wars, slavery, assassinations, and the civil rights movement. All valid parts of history, but for the average student all disconnected events and all of which must be remembered as historical blobs floating in space with no chronology and no connection to their lives and personal realities. I believe AP teachers are more fully engaged teaching their courses in a comprehensive way which in turn makes the material easier to learn and remember. Good luck |
| I just want my kids to get into the working world as fast as possible. AP courses count toward a degree in a public university, which is where I intend to send my kids. I don't really care about class implications. I'm from a WC family but my income is DC area UMC. Sibling is a millionaire. Our other sibling, who was more of a class striver and chose colleges based on class aspirations, does relatively well makes the least of any of us by a long shot. So my kids will take the AP courses, get in and out of state school, and then start busting their butts at work. |
I went to school in the early-mid 80's and our MCPS high school only offered a handful of AP classes. You couldn't take 9 APs even if you wanted to. I took one and still got into a competitive school. Things are sooooo much different now. |
| I went to HS in the late 90s and took five AP tests, in addition to getting an IB diploma. It was worthwhile because I met peers who cared as much as I did about learning -- they are an impressive bunch who are doing great things in their careers now. It seems like people have gotten lazy -- they want their kids to have a super laid back childhood. Not my cup of tea but your life, your kids. |