Anonymous wrote:No APs is old news. The Big 5 or whatever you want to call them (I think there were 7 who decided together to do this) all abandoned them. I’m much happier for it; I’d rather the girls explore classes in a college format, if they want to take the test, they can no problem. This isn’t a rare thing in top schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea all the fancy privates colluded a couple of years ago and agreed on this because the publics were kicking their butts on APs and the privates wanted to distinguish themselves from the publics to justify their exorbitant tuitions.
Now this is actually comical. If you believe this then you need to stick to public and be happy with the amount of time wasted on standardized tests, worksheets, etc
Anonymous wrote:Yea all the fancy privates colluded a couple of years ago and agreed on this because the publics were kicking their butts on APs and the privates wanted to distinguish themselves from the publics to justify their exorbitant tuitions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STA has kept them.
No AP classes is ok if your school has 100% fantastic teachers. But no school — including Holton — has 100% fantastic teachers. The lack of AP removes the guardrail protecting against a bad teacher. With AP in place, a bad teacher still has to follow a scheduled curriculum. Without AP, a bad teacher can proceed completely unchecked by fear of accountability from AP test scores (or the need to get through a scheduled curriculum).
Anonymous wrote:STA has kept them.
Anonymous wrote:Yea all the fancy privates colluded a couple of years ago and agreed on this because the publics were kicking their butts on APs and the privates wanted to distinguish themselves from the publics to justify their exorbitant tuitions.