Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, drop anything quantitative so COLLEGE AdComs can work more of their magic when crafting bespoke (IE DEMOGRAPHICALLY DIVERSE) classes each year.
Brilliant!
Meanwhile, any rigorous private school Admits can repeat their same classes again there for 4 of the 8 semesters whilst paying $70,000 twice.
Brilliant model again!
More interesting and 'bespoke' classes are why many people send their kids to private school. And students can take AP exams without classes with that label.
Anonymous wrote:Have you met kids from the elite privates? They are simply amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Sure, drop anything quantitative so AdComs can work more of their magic when crafting bespoke classes each year.
Brilliant!
Meanwhile, any rigorous private school Admits can repeat their same classes again there for 4 of the 8 semesters whilst paying $70,000 twice.
Brilliant model again!
Anonymous wrote:So many of these comments suggest many people have reading comprehension problems. Students at these privates schools will no longer be able to take AP classes; however, many of these students will still sit for the AP exams in the spring and will receive college credit if they perform well (provided their prospective colleges actually give them credit). The fact is that most class sizes in private schools are smaller (18 or fewer students versus 30 or 35 in public school) and allow for deeper engagement with the material, something the AP curriculum does not allow. Does that mean these private school students are privileged when compared to public school kids? Absolutely. But the point remains: smaller class sizes allow for this kind of change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Typical of the 1%ers. Because of the proliferation of AP curricula at public secondary schools and the elevated GPAs, public school admission proportions are increasing at elite colleges. Private schools are aiming to muddy the waters, inflate GPAs, and democratize their pool of candidates. Or rather, Oprah-size it....you get an A, you get an A, you get an A....everybody gets an A in some specially crafted, pseudo liberal arts seminar-class where the requirement is "tell us how you feel" about what you might have read......no paper, no essay, no exam.... just experiential learning....~%#
You clearly have no experience with private school education at a competitive private school. It has depth. More so than an AP survey class.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder whether your schools will soon drop the SAT as well, saying that it only represents a kind of rote learning they don’t do at your schools. And that it too represents kowtowing to the College Board.