Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College counselors in high schools are not that great. It doesn't matter if it's a fancy private or a bad public, OP. Please take everything they say with a grain of salt.
Even for those that are great, there are lots of details that change year by year. It's fine to ask, but I wouldn't expect one to know the up-to-date requirements of every school without checking the website.
Anonymous wrote:College counselors in high schools are not that great. It doesn't matter if it's a fancy private or a bad public, OP. Please take everything they say with a grain of salt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
Why aren't you consulting the Oxford and Cambridge websites instead of relying on a random college counselor? That's very risky.
3 years ago when I was looking at UK unis for my son, I recall the AP requirements were different for Ox and Cam. PLEASE do your due diligence and follow the actual websites' instructions! They are very specific and not flexible!
Also pay attention to deadline. Some of them occur much earlier than the typical American college deadlines.
In short, do your research and be prepared.
OP here: I did check the websites which stated (5) APs - mainly looked at Cambridge because my impression that it's more STEM-y than Oxford, which is what my DC wants to study. And it's not a "random" college counselor - it's the college counselor at our private school which sends 40% to top T10 every year, and have sent kids to Oxbridge pretty consistently over the years.
That's why I'm confused and came here to ask this question. it didn't make sense to me (answer: looks like Oxford has the lower AP requirement, and Cambridge needs more).
I also want to thank everyone else who has responded - many very useful answers here!
Anonymous wrote:OP,
Why aren't you consulting the Oxford and Cambridge websites instead of relying on a random college counselor? That's very risky.
3 years ago when I was looking at UK unis for my son, I recall the AP requirements were different for Ox and Cam. PLEASE do your due diligence and follow the actual websites' instructions! They are very specific and not flexible!
Also pay attention to deadline. Some of them occur much earlier than the typical American college deadlines.
In short, do your research and be prepared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I applied in 1999 as a lower middle class Army brat living in Illinois. Had 3 5s on AP exams and received an unconditional offer. I flew alone to England - before cell phones and handheld internet - at the age of 17 for the interview. I went and experienced the most surreal years of my life. My impression is it is all very different now.
Oh? How so?
Anonymous wrote:I applied in 1999 as a lower middle class Army brat living in Illinois. Had 3 5s on AP exams and received an unconditional offer. I flew alone to England - before cell phones and handheld internet - at the age of 17 for the interview. I went and experienced the most surreal years of my life. My impression is it is all very different now.
Anonymous wrote:There is a HUGE thread in here about this. Search function is your friend