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Reply to "AP Testing Still a Thing at Sidwell/GDS/Maret/Potomac/St Albans/NCS?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP here again - I see lots of comments about AP tests being used to place out of college classes. I get that. What about the AP test scores being used in admissions as a sign of rigor or academic qualification? I guess that's the question behind my question. [/quote] Yes, it puts the grade in the equivalent class into a broader perspective.[/quote] Thanks - so in that case, why are these school college advising offices discouraging the AP test for applicants to the most elite colleges?[/quote] NP. This is my concern. How do the schools communicate rigor to colleges, especially if DC wants to apply to a college unfamiliar with these DMV schools? With the current test optional environment, it seems like eliminating another standard isn't a great idea? [/quote] Grades and courseload.[/quote] What course designation in private schools would an out of state college admissions recognize as "rigorous"? [/quote] The privates generally define what course load is rigorous and send that out with the school profile.[/quote] How? The common app counselor letter?[/quote] No, there is separate information presented as part of the school profiled. It is something the privates provide to the colleges directly. Our private has revised the standard a few times over the years, mostly to take into account the effect of the increased number of advanced offerings. [/quote] All schools provide this, it's called a class profile; most are fairly similar in content, but some are more detailed than others. Essentially, it lets a college put your child's transcript in context vis a vis the rest of the class.[/quote] No, you miss the point. The topic was that some school profiles affirmatively define what is most rigorous through objective criteria.[/quote] Uh, the admissions people compare kids within the same school mostly. So yes, the school profile helps them determine which kids took the most rigorous classes available at the school. [/quot “Uh” no, again that was not the discussion. Some schools define the most rigorous track objectively and affirmatively explain what it is. No one is saying the school profile could not serve as a proxy for that, but that was not the point.[/quote] You don’t get but then you don’t care to. School profiles define “objectively” and “affirmatively” what the most rigorous courses track are in that school. Go find one online and explain to me how they are somehow deceptive, according to you.[/quote]
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