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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Poolsville SMACS program "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Is this program in any ways helpful to get better college or scholarships?[/quote] Kids get into top colleges and scholarships based on their own abilities rather than the programs they are in. A student who could attend SMACS will do just as well at a different magnet, in IBDP, in AP, or attending another specialty program.[/quote] Colleges use metrics like GPA to determine merit. A typical magnet student will be credited with more AP-caliber classes than a student at their home school taking just APs. [/quote] What? Are you trying to say that a magnet student takes more AP classes? This may be true, but they would also take a lot of AP classes if they were just at their home school. Or are you trying to say that somehow magnet AP classes count for more than "regular" AP classes, which is just untrue. Colleges also don't just use whatever the district's GPA/WGPA calculations are. They recalculate using their own formulas to have something comparable across districts. In MCPS Honors, AP, IB, and classes designated "Advanced" all earn 1.0 quality point bump in WGPA. No difference based on type of advanced course.[/quote] Yes, that's exactly why a magnet student has a higher threshold than what is possible for a student who is at their home school. They have access to additional AP-caliber classes. [/quote] A Lot more work and dedication required to thrive in the SMACS magnet. [/quote] The SMaCS program is also an extended day program. Instead of 7 periods, this program has 8... running almost an hour later than a normal HS day. Not only do the students take a high number of AP classes, they get an additional 8 semesters in HS where they can pursue electives they are interested in (and/or take even more AP classes). It's a grind for sure, but for students with a strong sense of time management it can be quite rewarding. A number of students in this program are actually eligible to graduate in their junior year (with a few check boxes taken care of in summer school). My kid started the program with 4 HS credits from MS program and had 20 of 22 required credits at the of sophomore year. Could have graduated really early, but everyone needs a senior year :)[/quote]
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