Anonymous wrote:OP here. It isn’t very confusing. Prep Scholar is a website that gives average GPAs and test scores for each college. They are obviously using weighted grades since some schools like Harvard and MIT are above a 4.0. At my kid’s Catholic HS, only a small handful of students (maybe 15 or fewer) have taken the most rigorous course load. Students aren’t allowed to just pick whatever they want. To get to the highest math class, a student would have to test out of algebra 1 and 2 as well as geometry to be able to start 9th grade in precalculus. Last year, two students did that. There is only one AP class for freshman and one for sophomores and you can only take them by invitation.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. It isn’t very confusing. Prep Scholar is a website that gives average GPAs and test scores for each college. They are obviously using weighted grades since some schools like Harvard and MIT are above a 4.0. At my kid’s Catholic HS, only a small handful of students (maybe 15 or fewer) have taken the most rigorous course load. Students aren’t allowed to just pick whatever they want. To get to the highest math class, a student would have to test out of algebra 1 and 2 as well as geometry to be able to start 9th grade in precalculus. Last year, two students did that. There is only one AP class for freshman and one for sophomores and you can only take them by invitation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wouldn’t that describe only a small handful of students though?
At schools close in to the district, 25% or more are graduating as valedictorians. Yup.
Anonymous wrote:Wouldn’t that describe only a small handful of students though?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So why take honors and AP classes then? They give you a grade boost but that grade boost doesn’t matter if PP is correct.
To learn?
Anonymous wrote:So why take honors and AP classes then? They give you a grade boost but that grade boost doesn’t matter if PP is correct.
Anonymous wrote:So why take honors and AP classes then? They give you a grade boost but that grade boost doesn’t matter if PP is correct. [/quote]
It does matter if your high school offers honors and AP classes. For example, the 75th percentile GPA for last year's entering class was a 4.49. The admissions officers want to see that your student took the most rigorous courses vis-a-vis his or her classmates. IF your school is one of the few privates in DC that have dropped AP courses, then it doesn't matter, but the counselor will still be asked if your student took he most rigorous courses offered by your high school.
Anonymous wrote:I’m looking at different school websites explaining the accepted freshman student profile and they all mention the average gpa is ______ on a 4.0 scale. What exactly does that mean? Is that weighted or unweighted? Or does it mean something else?