Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. All AP classes were easy for my kid. Got all 5s. Well balanced course load.
![]()
Easy because you forced your kid to prep for hours over the summer. Sure, my kid could get 5 and have an “easier” year if he started studying over the summer and bought a study guide too. But I’m not a tiger mom so my kid is doing just fine doing what is expected in class but I would not describe all APs as universally “easy.” OP, we are still in the middle of it (junior year) and my kid finds psych more work than expected but interesting. The core classes (calc, physics, Lang) are about what he expected.
Anonymous wrote:My DS has done 7 AP classes, including 4 now during his senior year. We're not big fans of the classes. The teaching is geared entirely to helping the kids do well on the AP test itself, which are multiple choice and short answer essays. It blows my mind that my kid will graduate HS without ever having written a real research paper despite taking multiple AP history and government classes, that he read only one book in AP Lang, that AP Stats tests are all multiple choice (so no partial credit for work.)
We have a younger kid and may send him to private - since most of the higher tier DC privates don't do AP tests because of the test-focused curriculum. Or we'll have him do the IB curriculum at his public HS.
Anonymous wrote:No. All AP classes were easy for my kid. Got all 5s. Well balanced course load.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS has done 7 AP classes, including 4 now during his senior year. We're not big fans of the classes. The teaching is geared entirely to helping the kids do well on the AP test itself, which are multiple choice and short answer essays. It blows my mind that my kid will graduate HS without ever having written a real research paper despite taking multiple AP history and government classes, that he read only one book in AP Lang, that AP Stats tests are all multiple choice (so no partial credit for work.)
We have a younger kid and may send him to private - since most of the higher tier DC privates don't do AP tests because of the test-focused curriculum. Or we'll have him do the IB curriculum at his public HS.
I teach AP stats and this is false. Half the test is free response/short answer.
Anonymous wrote:My DS has done 7 AP classes, including 4 now during his senior year. We're not big fans of the classes. The teaching is geared entirely to helping the kids do well on the AP test itself, which are multiple choice and short answer essays. It blows my mind that my kid will graduate HS without ever having written a real research paper despite taking multiple AP history and government classes, that he read only one book in AP Lang, that AP Stats tests are all multiple choice (so no partial credit for work.)
We have a younger kid and may send him to private - since most of the higher tier DC privates don't do AP tests because of the test-focused curriculum. Or we'll have him do the IB curriculum at his public HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. All AP classes were easy for my kid. Got all 5s. Well balanced course load.
Sorry, all 5s, except NSL (in 9th), which was a 4.
You need to start in the summer before because the exams are a month before school ends and so you do not get to prepare till the end of the school year. This was the big lesson learned in 9th grade.
Map out your entire HS courseload and be strategic about what you take when.
Anonymous wrote:No. All AP classes were easy for my kid. Got all 5s. Well balanced course load.
Anonymous wrote:This is bullsh*t. Please don't listen to this nonsense. Most kids will struggle with some aspect of at least one AP class. Math kids may find literature/writing classes more challenging and vice versa.All classes were easy.
This is bullsh*t. Please don't listen to this nonsense. Most kids will struggle with some aspect of at least one AP class. Math kids may find literature/writing classes more challenging and vice versa.All classes were easy.