Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since AP science classes require two periods and there are only 7 total, trade-offs have to be made. If you had to advise your teen to take an AP science class vs a 2nd year of a journalism class where they would be a head editor, which would you choose? Obviously, the AP adds more to a weighted GPA, but being an editor shows advancement to a leadership position. The student doesn't plan on majoring in either journalism or a science in college, BTW.
My advice to the student would be to follow his or her interests.
Anonymous wrote:Since AP science classes require two periods and there are only 7 total, trade-offs have to be made. If you had to advise your teen to take an AP science class vs a 2nd year of a journalism class where they would be a head editor, which would you choose? Obviously, the AP adds more to a weighted GPA, but being an editor shows advancement to a leadership position. The student doesn't plan on majoring in either journalism or a science in college, BTW.
Anonymous wrote:Why does your AP science class take up twice as many periods?

Anonymous wrote:Why does your AP science class take up twice as many periods?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is insanity! Who says the science is better just because it has the AP seal of approval. I hate what the College Board has turned education into. They have turned kids into grade grubbing GPA strategists.
It really is bananas. It wasn't part of my thought process when we decided where to send our son to high school, but I am now extremely grateful that he's at a school that doesn't rank students.
Anonymous wrote:This is insanity! Who says the science is better just because it has the AP seal of approval. I hate what the College Board has turned education into. They have turned kids into grade grubbing GPA strategists.