Anonymous wrote:Thank you for your replies. My questions are:
1) Are your kids not taking MV calculus - not an AP class?
2) What about double period AP classes - like chemistry and bio, in our kid's HS? Do they not eat up into other classes (e.g. you can only take 6 subjects rather than seven)
3) My kid wants to take AP drawing but it takes a long time to get there (4 years). Any advice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basis DC student; one each in 8th and 9th (and could have taken 2 in 9th); 6 in 10th (two econ, which are 1 semester courses), and 5 or 6 in 11th. And unusually, calc is split into 2 years (AB then BC).
More schools should split them. The rush to get students to do math as quickly as possible is getting out of hand. DS's college friends came into college with enough math for half a math major.
AB and BC are very similar. No reason to split.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basis DC student; one each in 8th and 9th (and could have taken 2 in 9th); 6 in 10th (two econ, which are 1 semester courses), and 5 or 6 in 11th. And unusually, calc is split into 2 years (AB then BC).
More schools should split them. The rush to get students to do math as quickly as possible is getting out of hand. DS's college friends came into college with enough math for half a math major.
Anonymous wrote:Basis DC student; one each in 8th and 9th (and could have taken 2 in 9th); 6 in 10th (two econ, which are 1 semester courses), and 5 or 6 in 11th. And unusually, calc is split into 2 years (AB then BC).
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for your replies. My questions are:
1) Are your kids not taking MV calculus - not an AP class?
2) What about double period AP classes - like chemistry and bio, in our kid's HS? Do they not eat up into other classes (e.g. you can only take 6 subjects rather than seven)
3) My kid wants to take AP drawing but it takes a long time to get there (4 years). Any advice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people are reporting that their kids are taking 10+, 15, and even 20 AP classes. How is this possible? I am looking at my rising 9th grader's schedule and I don't see how you can pack more than about 10 AP classes? They can only take 1 AP class in 9th grade and you can't take, say, AP Biology, from the getgo.
None allowed in 9th but 1/3 of the sophomores take an AP and the ones already in AP calc have a second. Junior year : almost half the grade has 3 APs, the top 1/4 has 5 (APphys 1, calc, Apush, AP lang, and an elective such as Gov or a second AP science or econ). Senior yr top 1/4 is in multivariable calc and linear algebra (post AP taught at the school by a phD), AP lit, AP foreign language, a second (or third) AP science, and an elective can also be AP though there is a senior civics seminar required. the top 1/3 or so students take six core courses 10th-12th plus one elective (arts) , most of these take AP or honors for all of these. 10-12 total is commonplace. Which AP courses are selected accounts for the difference in strength of schedule. AOs look at courses not number of APs. 8 of the hardest is better than 10 mostly weak ones
Anonymous wrote:Some people are reporting that their kids are taking 10+, 15, and even 20 AP classes. How is this possible? I am looking at my rising 9th grader's schedule and I don't see how you can pack more than about 10 AP classes? They can only take 1 AP class in 9th grade and you can't take, say, AP Biology, from the getgo.