| Do Blair magnet kids take any AP exam while in 9th or 10th grade? |
None in 9th grade 2 in 10th grade (Comp Sci A and Government) 11th grade many take Language, world history, Statistics, Calculus BC and one science exam. The latter three are AP exams that students study for on their own after taking a similar Magnet class 12th grade seems more variable- for example some take Literature, most just take honors English 12, some take an AP foreign language and many don’t take any foreign language course in 12th I suppose if you’ve taken several AP exams in different disciplines (humanities, Math and science) you can focus on Magnet electives in 12th grade |
If you are in a public school, then AP courses may be the highest level offered in a discipline (humanities, science, etc), although for Math there may be courses offered beyond AP Calculus BC such as, Multivariable Calculus, Linear Algebra, etc. Thus it helps to take many AP Courses even if the college of interest may not give credit for all of them. It helps you better prepared for rigorous course work at college level. By appearing for AP exam and scoring high (preferably 5, if not at least 4) you are signaling to the adcoms, by sharing the scores, that you are a diligent student and prepared to continue to do well once in college. In the case of private schools, many parents claim that the courses offered are at a higher level than the corresponding AP Courses and students are well prepared past college Freshman course level. If you believe that, then you don't need to appear for AP exams. Mere Private School graduation stamp should get you into one or more of HYPSM. |
| 4 and 5 are lumped together by colleges. Especially when they are not giving credits for it. |
The teacher can see much more information... |
False |
Of course they can go in with applications. But they aren’t required. Either self report on Common App or send official scores. |
This is NOT true. AP classes/grades are used to indicate rigor within the school and AP scores are used to indicate rigor compared to other schools. Colleges have stopped requiring official scores because they want to reduce the financial burden for low income applicants. But if you score well on APs, you should report them. |
No different from the bar exam. |
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Not the OP but my DD was also a bit surprised by a 3 on the AP Gov. Based on practice tests, grades, studying, she thought she'd get a 4.
She has a friend, also good student, who was surprised by a 2 on the same exam. I wonder if this test was a bit anomalous and distribution is different this year so that teacher's prep for prior year was not good enough for this year's test. The silver lining is that as DD was a freshman, this was her first taste of taking this kind of exam. Her immediate reaction was that she was going to study hard for APUSH next year. |
Oh. My. Word. I took one AP my junior year, and two my senior year. I got into UVA in the 90s. These poor kids! Makes me consider moving. |
Why are your kids stressed out? And why are other people kids coming to you and telling you that they are stressed out?
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| My son took 13 AP classes thought the high school (1 in freshman year, 2 in sophomore, 6 in junior and 4 in Senior) and scored perfect 5 in all the exams. He is not in magnet program. So proud of him !! |
| My dd (rising Junior) has taken 4 APs now. She pushes herself to get As but hasn't much cared about additional study for the AP exam and I haven't pushed her to do so--she has enough stress with regular coursework. But now I'm starting to wish I'd nudged a little harder. I hadn't realized that students with 5s self-report them to colleges. So by not self reporting, or by reporting lower scores (two 3s, one 4, one 5) she is signaling lower performance. I hate that there is one more metric to worry about, but I'll probably be nudging self-study a bit harder next year (in addition to aiming for an A in the class...) |
And are popping Adderall to pull all nighters and have high anxiety, stress, and depression. But it’s all good!
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