Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will use their own formula for the grades. They will take the Honors classes and award A grades a 5, B grades a 4 and so on. If your kid has taken 4 years of a foreign language, there's usually a placement test on entry that means they can skip any required FL classes when they get there.
What is very important to the UC colleges, is community service, how it is local rather than international and what a difference it makes to those receiving it. The local impact is key. Same for positions of leadership held in school.
Sports and other EC's are important as well so long as you're not showing privilege. They care more about football than fencing, more about band than private viola lessons. Etc.
There are no weighted points for honors classes for out of state students.
OP. Ugh. Any boost for taking and getting a 5 on AP exams they self studied for ?
Anonymous wrote:There is an even easier way to figure out the chances for your kid. Google "UC Admissions by Source School". Find your school. You will see the number who applied from your high school, the number accepted and the number who decided to enroll. For each UC.
Anonymous wrote:I’m trying to figure how student will fare in UC admissions. Private school, 3.9 average, nothing is weighted, core classes are honors classes (says on transcript), no APs offered.
I feel like there’s a formula but I can’t find it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will use their own formula for the grades. They will take the Honors classes and award A grades a 5, B grades a 4 and so on. If your kid has taken 4 years of a foreign language, there's usually a placement test on entry that means they can skip any required FL classes when they get there.
What is very important to the UC colleges, is community service, how it is local rather than international and what a difference it makes to those receiving it. The local impact is key. Same for positions of leadership held in school.
Sports and other EC's are important as well so long as you're not showing privilege. They care more about football than fencing, more about band than private viola lessons. Etc.
There are no weighted points for honors classes for out of state students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To clarify, AP course grades do result in a point weight for out of state applicants.
But IIRC, the number of weighted points is capped (I think at 5).
Anonymous wrote:To clarify, AP course grades do result in a point weight for out of state applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will use their own formula for the grades. They will take the Honors classes and award A grades a 5, B grades a 4 and so on. If your kid has taken 4 years of a foreign language, there's usually a placement test on entry that means they can skip any required FL classes when they get there.
What is very important to the UC colleges, is community service, how it is local rather than international and what a difference it makes to those receiving it. The local impact is key. Same for positions of leadership held in school.
Sports and other EC's are important as well so long as you're not showing privilege. They care more about football than fencing, more about band than private viola lessons. Etc.
There are no weighted points for honors classes for out of state students.
OP. Ugh. Any boost for taking and getting a 5 on AP exams they self studied for ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will use their own formula for the grades. They will take the Honors classes and award A grades a 5, B grades a 4 and so on. If your kid has taken 4 years of a foreign language, there's usually a placement test on entry that means they can skip any required FL classes when they get there.
What is very important to the UC colleges, is community service, how it is local rather than international and what a difference it makes to those receiving it. The local impact is key. Same for positions of leadership held in school.
Sports and other EC's are important as well so long as you're not showing privilege. They care more about football than fencing, more about band than private viola lessons. Etc.
There are no weighted points for honors classes for out of state students.
Anonymous wrote:First, calculate the UC GPAs https://rogerhub.com/gpa-calculator-uc/
Check data for admission by high school https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/about-us/information-center/admissions-source-school
If the GPAs are in range, whether the student will be admitted will boil down to how much a reader likes the essays.
Anonymous wrote:They will use their own formula for the grades. They will take the Honors classes and award A grades a 5, B grades a 4 and so on. If your kid has taken 4 years of a foreign language, there's usually a placement test on entry that means they can skip any required FL classes when they get there.
What is very important to the UC colleges, is community service, how it is local rather than international and what a difference it makes to those receiving it. The local impact is key. Same for positions of leadership held in school.
Sports and other EC's are important as well so long as you're not showing privilege. They care more about football than fencing, more about band than private viola lessons. Etc.