Well that's made up. |
+1 Who are these (supposed) parents and why are they lying? I have two in college and this is just not the case at all. |
What "normal" kids go there that you know of PP? |
+1, totally made up Independent schools in DC are phasing out APs altogether. https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2018/06/18/several-well-known-private-schools-in-the-d-c-area-are-scrapping-advanced-placement-classes/%3foutputType=amp Guess are those Sidwell, Holton Arms, NCS, GDS, etc. kids aren’t going to college. |
|
Fun colleges he will likely get into?
Ole Miss U of Colorado |
| Off track, but it would be impossible to finish a rigorous STEM degree (engineering) in 4 years without the APs. Literally impossible. |
| Read Colleges that Change Lives, for liberal arts options with small classes and lots of faculty attention. |
|
My daughter just started at University of Denver on a merit scholarship - she did have some AP classes, so maybe your son wouldn't get merit. But it's a solid school, seems like a lot of fun, in Denver where she wants to live. I think it will give her the network she needs to find a decent job in Denver provided that's what she wants.
Some really nuts posters in this thread trying to justify their own choices, I think. There are literally hundreds of millions of "average" people in this country and many of them are doing just fine. |
Arizona State University. Great programs, not hard to get into, great town to go to college in |
Kalamazoo College, New College of Florida, Truman State University, Knox College, Augustana College |
+1. These are both good, solid schools with wonderful programs. I am happy to read this post. So sick of reading about people who are only shooting for "top 20" colleges. It isn't happening for us. I can already predict it with my kid, who hates the stress of it all, but is still a good student. |
Uh, what? Cornell? Florida? You're on crack. |
+1. Encouraged. Would love if my kid went to Wisconsin. Great school. My niece and nephew are there and they grew up in Minneapolis area - reciprocal tuition. They are getting a great education. Nephew has a job once he graduates. |
Me and my brother's story. My brother did not even get a 3.0 in high school. 2.8 at best. He was in advanced classes but not AP. Went to open admission state school and flipped a switch. Straight As. Then he transfered to a better state school. Then IVY law and an amazing career. I was an overachiver early but puttered out. Made it to grad school and a so so career. But mostly meh. I do think if I had gone to a small liberal arts no name college rather than a top state school things may have been different. But who knows. On teh otehr hand, I may be happier than my brother. Certianly I have fewer anger issues. But none of that is measured or cared about on dcum. In terms of high-power career and money, my C+ in high school brother is miles ahead of me, |
|
If you know what small schools offer (even for science majors), I am actually amazed that people prefer a huge school, with huge classes and where kids get little individual attention.
I can’t tell you how many cool things have already happened at my kid’s small, second tier, LAC: History of Food teacher cooking dinner for the class (of 19), advisor to the Wildlife Society taking the kids out one Saturday night in the spring to find frogs and the like. My kid loves it. |