Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Thanks for explaining it this way. This makes sense. But it also sounds like AP has just become honors+, like another level. It used to be that taking an AP class was a big deal. I am still wrapping my head around this evolution, but what you’re saying makes sense in that context. If someone had taken 4+ APs in one year when we were kids, that would have been insane, at least in the schools I’m familiar with. Sounds like it happens regularly now.
Anonymous wrote:30 years ago my high school offered 4 years of AP history. World in 9th, euro in 10th, US in 11th, and a semester long AP gov senior year.
It’s not new to offer AP to underclassmen, it just depends on the state/district standards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Thanks for explaining it this way. This makes sense. But it also sounds like AP has just become honors+, like another level. It used to be that taking an AP class was a big deal. I am still wrapping my head around this evolution, but what you’re saying makes sense in that context. If someone had taken 4+ APs in one year when we were kids, that would have been insane, at least in the schools I’m familiar with. Sounds like it happens regularly now.
It's always kind of been honors+. 30 years ago, the honors kids took honors english in 9th and 10th grade, and then AP Lang and Lit in 11th and 12th. There was no Honors english class for 11th and 12th. You either took AP or regular. This isn't and has never been uncommon. We also didn't have honors-but-not-AP US history or US government. You either took AP or regular.
30 years ago in FCPS - we did have AP Gov and AP US History; we didn't have AP World. AP Calc BC/AB and Linear Algebra/Calc III via GMU. I was in Herndon High, so it's not special like TJ or something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Thanks for explaining it this way. This makes sense. But it also sounds like AP has just become honors+, like another level. It used to be that taking an AP class was a big deal. I am still wrapping my head around this evolution, but what you’re saying makes sense in that context. If someone had taken 4+ APs in one year when we were kids, that would have been insane, at least in the schools I’m familiar with. Sounds like it happens regularly now.
It's always kind of been honors+. 30 years ago, the honors kids took honors english in 9th and 10th grade, and then AP Lang and Lit in 11th and 12th. There was no Honors english class for 11th and 12th. You either took AP or regular. This isn't and has never been uncommon. We also didn't have honors-but-not-AP US history or US government. You either took AP or regular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Thanks for explaining it this way. This makes sense. But it also sounds like AP has just become honors+, like another level. It used to be that taking an AP class was a big deal. I am still wrapping my head around this evolution, but what you’re saying makes sense in that context. If someone had taken 4+ APs in one year when we were kids, that would have been insane, at least in the schools I’m familiar with. Sounds like it happens regularly now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Thanks for explaining it this way. This makes sense. But it also sounds like AP has just become honors+, like another level. It used to be that taking an AP class was a big deal. I am still wrapping my head around this evolution, but what you’re saying makes sense in that context. If someone had taken 4+ APs in one year when we were kids, that would have been insane, at least in the schools I’m familiar with. Sounds like it happens regularly now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Thanks for explaining it this way. This makes sense. But it also sounds like AP has just become honors+, like another level. It used to be that taking an AP class was a big deal. I am still wrapping my head around this evolution, but what you’re saying makes sense in that context. If someone had taken 4+ APs in one year when we were kids, that would have been insane, at least in the schools I’m familiar with. Sounds like it happens regularly now.
Four APs would be a light load. I am guessing my kid will end up with at least 10.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Thanks for explaining it this way. This makes sense. But it also sounds like AP has just become honors+, like another level. It used to be that taking an AP class was a big deal. I am still wrapping my head around this evolution, but what you’re saying makes sense in that context. If someone had taken 4+ APs in one year when we were kids, that would have been insane, at least in the schools I’m familiar with. Sounds like it happens regularly now.
Anonymous wrote:AP language covers the 11th grade English standards, just at a college level. A student who has taken 11th grade English and AP Lang hasn’t covered the 12th grade standards.
I am in MD, so the sequence for other subjects is different, but in MD US Government is a 10th grade course. If you take AP Gov in 10th you can substitute it. You can take it in 12th, but in that case you also needed to take regular or honors Gov in 10th.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not the school, it’s FCPS. There are plenty of other English options, including DE, which tends to be easier.