Anonymous wrote:I have always assumed a B in an AP class is fine for schools outside the top 20. Is this incorrect? How do normal smart kids (not geniuses) get all As in multiple APs, do varsity sports, volunteer, etc. ? Do they even have time for going out with friends, dating, watching TV?
Anonymous wrote:So you're telling me that EVERY incoming freshman for some of these (non-ivy) schools has a 3.9 unweighted?
Anonymous wrote:Every college does it differently, so there is really no reason to fret about it.
Your kid should take the classes in high school that they want to take and do as well in them as they can.
There is no single answer or formula.
Anonymous wrote:Rigor is good when you have all As or nearly all As. If not, rigor is bad.
Anonymous wrote:I have always assumed a B in an AP class is fine for schools outside the top 20. Is this incorrect? How do normal smart kids (not geniuses) get all As in multiple APs, do varsity sports, volunteer, etc. ? Do they even have time for going out with friends, dating, watching TV?
Anonymous wrote:3.7ish will not do. 3.85ish is more like it. 3.9ish allows you a confident application.
Anonymous wrote:Every college does it differently, so there is really no reason to fret about it.
Your kid should take the classes in high school that they want to take and do as well in them as they can.
There is no single answer or formula.
Anonymous wrote:What do the colleges look at? And how do they weigh raw GPA vs. weighted for admissions?
I've asked a million times, including at the school and i get a "it depends." I get that but what am I supp'd to do with that information? For ex., I'm looking at the College Confidential, Niche, UNNWR, etc. that lists the stats for incoming classes. And lots of them, even ones I would not have thought, are 3.8-4.0. Fine. But is this weighted? Unweighted?
Take a kid who had all A's in HN level classes. Now is in al APs/DE and is getting some B's. Do colleges want to see the increased "rigor" (which is what we were told) and some Bs or all A's in Honors classes? This is not for ivy level schools but good schools of the variety Lehigh, Colgate, etc. Weighted GPA looks great but unweight is likely to go down some at the semester (like, 3.7'ish . .. . don't really know b/c the teachers don't like to enter grades to I'm going on the work I've seen and few grades entered). Kid is also an athlete and lots of ECs.
And before you say it, we have LOTS of safeties on the list.