Anonymous wrote:Two kids in college, both in CS.
The first one had a lot of AP classes that he used for college credit. This allowed him to take more advanced CS classes earlier, with helped when applying to internships (he got one at a a FAANG after Sophomore year). He is finishing up his Junior year now and can graduate early if he wants but is taking more advanced CS classes and some that he enjoys. He was always a very good student so this worked for him.
The second kid also had a AP credit that he could have used but he decided to retake some classes to boost his GPA. He regrets it because as long as you get over a 3.0, most companies do not care about GPA. They care more about internships/project work which is easier to get if you've taking relevant classes. For example, online coding assessments through Code Signal or Leetcode is easier if you've taken certain classes. Although he somewhat regrets it, I think it was the best decision for him because while he was a good student, I think the transition to a competitive college would have been difficult if he jumped right in to material he didn't know. This gave him confidence and eased the transition for him.
Both approach worked, but it was based on the kid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still report the AP courses and exams but take the class in college. AP courses are really not the equivalent of a college-level course at a competitive school most of the time so it's usually still a challenge.
AP courses are the equivalent of competitive college courses at some high schools. I know many students who have taken 5-6 APs in junior and senior year of high school who've said their first and second year at their Ivy League school or UVa was about the same level of challenge as the final two years of high school.
Were they able to score As at college level?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still report the AP courses and exams but take the class in college. AP courses are really not the equivalent of a college-level course at a competitive school most of the time so it's usually still a challenge.
AP courses are the equivalent of competitive college courses at some high schools. I know many students who have taken 5-6 APs in junior and senior year of high school who've said their first and second year at their Ivy League school or UVa was about the same level of challenge as the final two years of high school.
Anonymous wrote:Still report the AP courses and exams but take the class in college. AP courses are really not the equivalent of a college-level course at a competitive school most of the time so it's usually still a challenge.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. So it seems many people do this. There is no down side?
Anonymous wrote:Many kids repeat calc or mv calc or chem in college to have an easier class or to boost their gpa.