Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is an applicant with Mandarin Chinese coursework through four years (with no family or other connection to the language, and with 2/3 to 3/4 of the class having Mandarin Chinese as the primary language / language spoken at home) perceived to have pursued a FL path with far greater rigor than one where the applicant's FL is Spanish or French?
No. A foreign language is foreign language.
Sorry, my kid took Chinese under similar circumstances . It was difficult but was her choice, not made to impress college AO’s.
Stop seeing everything through that lense. It is not healthy
Anonymous wrote:Is an applicant with Mandarin Chinese coursework through four years (with no family or other connection to the language, and with 2/3 to 3/4 of the class having Mandarin Chinese as the primary language / language spoken at home) perceived to have pursued a FL path with far greater rigor than one where the applicant's FL is Spanish or French?
Anonymous wrote:Is an applicant with Mandarin Chinese coursework through four years (with no family or other connection to the language, and with 2/3 to 3/4 of the class having Mandarin Chinese as the primary language / language spoken at home) perceived to have pursued a FL path with far greater rigor than one where the applicant's FL is Spanish or French?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask your college counselor. I think different schools have different views on this. My daughter did AP Spanish IV and got a 5 in her junior year and the college counselor was insistent she needed to take Spanish V senior year. And this counselor is pretty laid back about most things.
Thanks. Ok here, DD's foreign language is French and only has one AP option. I wonder if you were told to do the next Spanish level because of the next AP option?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask your college counselor. I think different schools have different views on this. My daughter did AP Spanish IV and got a 5 in her junior year and the college counselor was insistent she needed to take Spanish V senior year. And this counselor is pretty laid back about most things.
Thanks. Ok here, DD's foreign language is French and only has one AP option. I wonder if you were told to do the next Spanish level because of the next AP option?
Anonymous wrote:Ask your college counselor. I think different schools have different views on this. My daughter did AP Spanish IV and got a 5 in her junior year and the college counselor was insistent she needed to take Spanish V senior year. And this counselor is pretty laid back about most things.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone have any experience with colleges that require "four years of the same foreign language," and have a kid who started their foreign language in middle school (for which they received high school credit) and finished up the foreign language sequence with an AP by 11th grade. Will schools that require "four years of the same foreign language" consider that application (with only three years taken while in HS) as not meeting this requirement?