Anonymous wrote:There definitely are still many universities, including big private and public ones, where you can get enough AP/CLEP credit (if you think AP is a joke you haven’t seen CLEP…) to graduate 1-3 semesters early. Those universities do not appeal to private school families because they are wealthy enough that they do not need to save money on college.
Anonymous wrote:The only real benefit of taking the AP tests is to earn credit for courses at college. The problem is that many colleges now no longer award credit for these courses. Many colleges and universities have claimed the APs are not equivalent to the rigor of most college courses. Of course, colleges also have a financial investment in requiring students to take as many credits as possible. For a few years, some colleges were using AP scores in lieu of standardized test scores. If you're DC wants to take the test, I don't see any reason why they shouldn't. Just know there are fees involved and, depending on the number of AP tests they take, it can become expensive.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - looks like several similarly confused parents.
Our kid chose not to take AP History, English etc despite being in the higher level classes at our school.
Best advice i got was from an outside friend who has worked in college admissions for many years who said "if studying for the test has even a 10% chance of reducing kid's GPA in final report card of junior year, then do not take the test" - focus should be on junior yr GPA.
If the school was really transparent about it, they would be frank to say for kids who get into top 50 colleges last 2 years since this policy has been in place, here's the % admission rate to Top 50 schools by "took any AP test or not" - frankly they should release the same data for SAT/ACT.
The messaging on this topic (like many others at this school) seems to be entirely focused on the middle academic kid and on "let's not say or do anything to stress kids and parents."
Meanwhile, we all know the randomness of the college process and fact that equivalent elite high schools in every other other state in America do offer AP tests and kids are judged against a national pool not just DMV.
Oh well - $45k of tuition and i can't get a straight or intellectually consistent answer on this AP question
Anonymous wrote:If it's just a dozen or so kids it could definitely be a cohort of prospective UK applicants. My DD graduated from a big 3 in 2019 and even back then they had 7 or 8 kids applying to UK schools. With the current admissions craziness, it wouldn't surprise me that more people are thinking of applying abroad as a hedge.