Anonymous wrote:The A is better. Don’t accelerate unless you’re confident of a solid A.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he can pull off an A-. Math is strong suit.
What level math do competitive colleges want to see? Beyond calculus??
Yes.
Not true. If stem, yes. If anything else, reaching calculus by 12th is fine (even AB Calculus).
This is highly high school dependent. From the top public and the top 2 privates, UVA in state takes students with calc AB as a senior, but all schools more selective never take from that math level unless a recruited athlete or some other big hook. Legacy alone is not enough of a boost: they are all from the top math group, even humanities kids, and alum advisors spell it out to parents that the top levels are expected . These schools have 30% or more taking Calc BC (or multivariable calc) in 12th. Calc AB in 12th is middle of the pack. Parents need to understand how each high school works and what is common and doable from specific math paths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he can pull off an A-. Math is strong suit.
What level math do competitive colleges want to see? Beyond calculus??
Yes.
Anonymous wrote:I think he can pull off an A-. Math is strong suit.
What level math do competitive colleges want to see? Beyond calculus??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he can pull off an A-. Math is strong suit.
What level math do competitive colleges want to see? Beyond calculus??
Yes.
Not true. If stem, yes. If anything else, reaching calculus by 12th is fine (even AB Calculus).
Anonymous wrote:What is better for college admissions:
Taking a medium difficulty class and getting a high A
-or-
Taking a hard course one year ahead of your classmates and getting a high B (maybe low A)?
My rising 9th grader is transferring into a private (not in DC). He has the choice to take Integrated Math or Algebra 2 with 10th graders. Integrated math is a combo of geometry and algebra 1. He has had both but has some holes in his algebra knowledge.
He could address those gaps this summer and take the harder Algebra 2, which would put him on track to take Calculus in 11th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he can pull off an A-. Math is strong suit.
What level math do competitive colleges want to see? Beyond calculus??
Yes.
Anonymous wrote:I think he can pull off an A-. Math is strong suit.
What level math do competitive colleges want to see? Beyond calculus??
Anonymous wrote:Don’t accelerate unless he’s really strong in math. It just gets harder. For college it’s best to get A’s in the hardest classes. If that seems unmanageable, I would go for the less accelerated option unless he lives math.