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College and University Discussion
Reply to "S/o (VA public schools). IB and college preparedness"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]But AP lets you be great at some things and only OK at other things, right? Whereas IB you have to be great at everything? [/quote] IB is essentially like taking two full years of AP only courses. A student who could handle AP in every subject would be able to handle the full IB diploma. However, just like with AP, the student can pick and choose some IB courses without going for the full diploma. [/quote] Some of the IB diploma candidates I met definitely could not handle a schedule of AP-only courses. Some IB courses are not particularly rigorous. [/quote] I have heard the exact opposite. People seem to want their kids to do AP instead of Ib because it's easier and less work. [/quote] Not so. In any event, it's ridiculous to suggest that only kids who could handle AP in every subject would be able to handle the full IB diploma. The IB analog to a student taking all AP courses would be IB students taking all IB HL courses. That isn't required, and IB diploma students often take multiple SL courses as permitted under the IBO rules. When I hear such nonsense, it makes me think IB exists only so that small groups of IB diploma candidates and their parents can try to mislead others into thinking their kids have been in some elite, academic "boot camp." It does nothing for most students at IB schools, and the amount of disinformation about IB is staggering. But as long as the IBO has marketing materials that suggest IB will help students to become "global citizens" who have learned "how to think" (presumably, this means how to approach an assignment, not what they should believe), some people who think their kids might not do well in AP-level math and science courses will jump on board. [/quote]
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