Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
Kids I know in the program say that the MC classes are easier than AP classes and you don’t need to take the anxiety producing AP exams.
I think that depends on the courses and degree. For students in STEM math is math and AP only goes to Calc
I’m confused. Are you saying for math/stem it’s better to go the ap/IB route or the early college route?
I think they're saying the latter goes further, covering diffyQs, linear algebra, and calc 3
Yes. With actual college credit that is transferable. My kid has Calc 1-3, Diff Eq, Physics 1-3, Chem 1-2, & a smattering of other engineering courses. You can’t do all that via AP credits.
There are people who are absolutely convinced that community college classes are inferior to AP/IB. In reality, it’s just like all education (HS, CC, 4yr) with some fantastic teachers, most okay, and a few poor ones. As far as rigor goes, the MC STEM classes all had actual midterm and final exams counting for a significant portion of the grade. And I think people forget that the MC classes transfer directly to UMD. Many of those early college graduates are going to UMD-CP or UMBC right into finishing a 4 year engineering degree in two more years. It’s a great pathway to be in a high paying job at 20 without much (if any) college debt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
Kids I know in the program say that the MC classes are easier than AP classes and you don’t need to take the anxiety producing AP exams.
I think that depends on the courses and degree. For students in STEM math is math and AP only goes to Calc
I’m confused. Are you saying for math/stem it’s better to go the ap/IB route or the early college route?
I think they're saying the latter goes further, covering diffyQs, linear algebra, and calc 3
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
Kids I know in the program say that the MC classes are easier than AP classes and you don’t need to take the anxiety producing AP exams.
I think that depends on the courses and degree. For students in STEM math is math and AP only goes to Calc
I’m confused. Are you saying for math/stem it’s better to go the ap/IB route or the early college route?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
Kids I know in the program say that the MC classes are easier than AP classes and you don’t need to take the anxiety producing AP exams.
I think that depends on the courses and degree. For students in STEM math is math and AP only goes to Calc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
Kids I know in the program say that the MC classes are easier than AP classes and you don’t need to take the anxiety producing AP exams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
My DC switched from a magnet program to Early College because they liked the schedule better and the quicker pace of classes. Wasn’t super into the HS scene. Had more time in the day to do other things.
That’s sounds nice. If you don’t mind me asking….was she able to graduate early from college that she ending up attending after MC?
Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
My DC switched from a magnet program to Early College because they liked the schedule better and the quicker pace of classes. Wasn’t super into the HS scene. Had more time in the day to do other things.
Anonymous wrote:For students who continue to 4-yr university degreee programs, how do students choose between Early College (on campus at UMUC) vs AP/IB at high school?
Is it based on AP/IB availability at home school (so UMUC acts like a Magnet)?
Or social/age reasons?
Anonymous wrote:Congrats!
Is P-Tech a thing for the rest of college, or do they move on to another major?
Any particular reason why it’s mostly engineering/tech/business?