Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get rid of the College Board.
Colleges have figured out how to do admissions with no testing this year, they should do it forever.
I say this with 2 kids who took 10+ AP exams each, one was a National Merit semi finalist and the other a finalist. The CB is a huge money making scam!
Totally agree.
What was the cost of the credits your children paid for their college classes vs the credits they earned through their AP exams? With my AP credits I was almost a sophomore
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get rid of the College Board.
Colleges have figured out how to do admissions with no testing this year, they should do it forever.
I say this with 2 kids who took 10+ AP exams each, one was a National Merit semi finalist and the other a finalist. The CB is a huge money making scam!
Totally agree.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/sat-ending-essay-subject-tests/2021/01/19/ac82cdd8-574a-11eb-a817-e5e7f8a406d6_story.html
The College Board announced Tuesday it will discontinue those assessments. Citing the coronavirus crisis, officials said the pandemic has “accelerated a process already underway at the College Board to simplify our work and reduce demands on students.”
The testing organization, based in New York, also revealed the launch of a process to revise the main SAT, aiming to make the admission test “more flexible” and “streamlined” and enable students to take the exam digitally instead of with pencil and paper.
Anonymous wrote:Get rid of the College Board.
Colleges have figured out how to do admissions with no testing this year, they should do it forever.
I say this with 2 kids who took 10+ AP exams each, one was a National Merit semi finalist and the other a finalist. The CB is a huge money making scam!
Anonymous wrote:Now they have to take a hard look at the specialized application streamlining, for a fee, through the arrangements in Watertown, MA. Rip-off.
Anonymous wrote:Subject tests are worthless with the proliferation of AP tests.
The College Board announced Tuesday it will discontinue those assessments. Citing the coronavirus crisis, officials said the pandemic has “accelerated a process already underway at the College Board to simplify our work and reduce demands on students.”
The testing organization, based in New York, also revealed the launch of a process to revise the main SAT, aiming to make the admission test “more flexible” and “streamlined” and enable students to take the exam digitally instead of with pencil and paper.