Anonymous wrote:My senior is bailing on the three they signed up for. It is meaningless for the college they are attending.
Anonymous wrote:My kids school pays for the tests so they are required to take them. But I'd leave it completely up to the kid whether or how much they study for it.
Anonymous wrote:Question for some experienced people out there:
My son has already been accepted to a great college that he is very excited about.
He now has serious senior-itis.
His school does not have AP courses anymore except for one or two holdouts that will be going away soon.
He is supposed to take an AP test this week and has put zero time into studying.
How much should I bug him this week? Does it matter at all? Is it only helpful if he gets a good score and meaningless if he gets a bad score? That is what he is trying to tell me. He doesn't have to prepare because it can only be a good thing, and if not, who cares.
Is he right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would find out his new college's policy on how scores for his specific AP tests would be used. At my kid's college, sometimes a 4 of 5 was helpful (for getting into higher courses, etc.), sometimes a score made no difference. It can vary by subject.
The kid is a high school senior already accepted to college. The time has passed for his mommy to figure out what one score on one AP exam might affect what classes he can take in college. If he goes to college and discovers that he didn't test out of a prereq because he was too lazy to study for an AP exam in high school, them's the breaks. It's on him. Loosen the strings, mommy.
Anonymous wrote:I would find out his new college's policy on how scores for his specific AP tests would be used. At my kid's college, sometimes a 4 of 5 was helpful (for getting into higher courses, etc.), sometimes a score made no difference. It can vary by subject.
Anonymous wrote:I would find out his new college's policy on how scores for his specific AP tests would be used. At my kid's college, sometimes a 4 of 5 was helpful (for getting into higher courses, etc.), sometimes a score made no difference. It can vary by subject.