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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Reply to "Practical differences between AP and IB in FCPS?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]IB is geared towards earning an “IB diploma,” whereas AP is more a la carte. To get an IB diploma you have to take courses in different subject areas, akin to college distribution requirements. You take the AP courses that interest you. Because of the relatively small percentage of students at IB schools in FCPS who pursue an IB diploma, they now emphasize that you can also take IB courses a la carte. That is true, but it’s not the original purpose of IB. IB courses tend to be more writing-heavy but also to cover less material. AP courses tend to be more like introductory college “survey” courses. They cover a wider range of material, and only some AP courses are writing-intensive. AP courses are year-long courses or in a few cases semester courses, whereas IB courses are one or in some cases two years long. FCPS primarily installed IB courses at lower performing high schools to try to create a “school-within-a-school” environment. Most of the higher performing schools in FCPS are AP schools where most kids take multiple AP courses. Because AP courses are a la carte and there are no distribution requirements, it is easier to take more STEM courses at AP schools. IB courses are designed by an organization (the IBO) based in Geneva, whereas AP courses are designed by the College Board, which is based in the United States. The IBO touts turning IB students into “global citizens,” whereas the College Board primarily touts that AP courses are good college prep. Historically, American universities were more likely to give college credits for AP courses than for IB courses, but now most schools recognize AP and IB test scores equally (or in some cases not at all). [/quote] Good summary. IB HL courses are comparable with AP, although in science and math they are not as good and they take two years compared to one year for AP. SL are just like honors high school classes so they are inferior to AP. If IB is not supplemented with AP the schedule will be weaker having only 3 HL in two years. It’s very common for AP students to have 6+ AP in the last two years of high school. I find it odd when people say AP teches to the test given the insane amount of testing and assessments in the IB program. There’s less testing and more freedom for the teacher to structure the class as they see fit in AP.[/quote]
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