Anonymous wrote:
So schools that have IB programs do not have AP, is that correct? (FCPS)
Can you take the IB courses and sit for AP exams to get credit without the whole IB diploma?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HL kids in the same course read only six literary texts over two years.
My child is at an FCPS school and read 6 novels in their junior year of IB English Literature HL and has 7 assigned this year.
Anonymous wrote:HL kids in the same course read only six literary texts over two years.
Anonymous wrote:I teach both. In my subject, AP English Lit and AP English Lang are more rigorous than IB English Lang/Lit or IB English Lit. There is more content in the AP courses, and a high amount of fluff in the IB courses to allow them to stretch to two years.
SL IB Lang/Lit kids read only two literary texts (novels, plays, or short story collections) per year, for a total of four literary texts at the end of the diploma. The non-literary units are quite unstructured with very little oversight from the IB. HL kids in the same course read only six literary texts over two years.
Many of the students who have been successful in my IB courses would not have been able to pass AP Lit or AP Lang/Lit.
It always makes me sad when a kid who loves English opts fo the IB course, but my IB experience is what makes my CV strong, so...
I am sure that now parents with no teaching experience, or teachers with experience in only one of the courses will come to say I am wrong, but at this point I have been teaching both AP and IB for almost ten years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IB hands out special snowflake awards to students completing an IB diploma; AP does not divide students taking AP courses into "AP diploma" students and everyone else.
So just about every thread on this topic consists of IB students/parents insisting their special snowflake awards were deserved, while the AP schools just chug along with the much larger cohorts of talented students getting into better schools with more college credits (although some top schools cut back on the credits awarded any IB or AP exam scores).
OP word of caution—don’t listen to any parent who needs to diss a program to make an argument for the other—including this PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IB hands out special snowflake awards to students completing an IB diploma; AP does not divide students taking AP courses into "AP diploma" students and everyone else.
So just about every thread on this topic consists of IB students/parents insisting their special snowflake awards were deserved, while the AP schools just chug along with the much larger cohorts of talented students getting into better schools with more college credits (although some top schools cut back on the credits awarded any IB or AP exam scores).
OP word of caution—don’t listen to any parent who needs to diss a program to make an argument for the other—including this PP.
Anonymous wrote:IB hands out special snowflake awards to students completing an IB diploma; AP does not divide students taking AP courses into "AP diploma" students and everyone else.
So just about every thread on this topic consists of IB students/parents insisting their special snowflake awards were deserved, while the AP schools just chug along with the much larger cohorts of talented students getting into better schools with more college credits (although some top schools cut back on the credits awarded any IB or AP exam scores).
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me why is IB is considered a better and more rigorous program and AP is not, why are most of the AP schools concentrated in the good/better schools and the IB programs are in the worse schools (there are a few exceptions). Also, why if you are on the west end of Fairfax you have no AP option high schools that are anywhere near. Shouldn't they intermix throughout the county IB and AP programs? I get that they don't seem to have the resources to do both programs at all schools.
And, I assume that just because you are stuck at an IB school you can sit and take the AP exam for AP credit like you used to, which I guess is the option.