Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right. Target colleges and universities are generally in the 30-70 rank range (think Oberlin, Vassar, Bard, LMU).
For the schools in the 30-50 range at least, she will need more APs.
Anonymous wrote:I have a DD who does well in a subject but has overall trouble managing a heavy workload. She has the option of taking AP English Lit junior year, but isn’t sure. Anyone have advice on how much an AP matters for college applications?
She has two APs already (one sophomore and one junior year not including English).
TIA
Anonymous wrote:Right. Target colleges and universities are generally in the 30-70 rank range (think Oberlin, Vassar, Bard, LMU).
Anonymous wrote:Your DC wants to demonstrate that they can handle the academic demands of college by their selected courses and grades. So DC's course selections and the grades they get, should instill confidence in the AO reading their application.
If taking an AP means getting a C or B -, I don't think it's a great call. Showing rigor is good, but only if you can get at least a B or higher.
I'd consider some other APs that will play to DC's strengths and give confidence that DC will be able to handle college.
I don't think sheer # of APs is the most important thing, it depends more on what your kid is likely going to focus on studying at college (their likely major) and how selective the colleges are.
For a target college, I think 5-7 APs total including those in DC's field by end of senior year, should be good.
Fwiw, my DD had 7 APs total and is at Tufts. Her school offered over 25 APs in various subjects, but she focused on core subjects for her likely major. She did no APs in science. She is a social science major fyi.
Anonymous wrote:Your DC wants to demonstrate that they can handle the academic demands of college by their selected courses and grades. So DC's course selections and the grades they get, should instill confidence in the AO reading their application.
If taking an AP means getting a C or B -, I don't think it's a great call. Showing rigor is good, but only if you can get at least a B or higher.
I'd consider some other APs that will play to DC's strengths and give confidence that DC will be able to handle college.
I don't think sheer # of APs is the most important thing, it depends more on what your kid is likely going to focus on studying at college (their likely major) and how selective the colleges are.
For a target college, I think 5-7 APs total including those in DC's field by end of senior year, should be good.
Fwiw, my DD had 7 APs total and is at Tufts. Her school offered over 25 APs in various subjects, but she focused on core subjects for her likely major. She did no APs in science. She is a social science major fyi.