Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are something like 2000 4-year colleges and universities. Regardless of whether he takes calc AB or BC, there will be a good fit for him.
There are two approaches to college. One is too pick the kind of school you want and then forces your son to be the kind of high school student who can get in. The second approach is to choose the high school classes and experience that are best for your son's skills and temperament and then see what colleges follow from that.
That sounds good in theory. But I don’t think any of the kids with the profiles built to get into top20 colleges just love taking every AP class possible, grinding through 4 hrs of high school (and probably middle school too) and building “non profit” organizations. They are only doing this to get into top school to maximize professional opportunities as adults. Either your kid is willing and wants to put into the effort or they aren’t. But I really don’t think it has anything to do with the student actually enjoying it
Do you know kids admitted to top 20 schools? The ones I know (including two to Yale, one to Brown this year) do not fit this profile at all. They are smart, intrinsically motivated kids who pursued stuff they enjoyed and were really good at it. Sure, maybe they made some marginal decisions to boost rigor—e.g., taking AP foreign language even though they don’t love the subject—but they didn’t do the stuff people on here assume is necessary to get into a top school.
Their parents probably had deep pockets and they could ED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are something like 2000 4-year colleges and universities. Regardless of whether he takes calc AB or BC, there will be a good fit for him.
There are two approaches to college. One is too pick the kind of school you want and then forces your son to be the kind of high school student who can get in. The second approach is to choose the high school classes and experience that are best for your son's skills and temperament and then see what colleges follow from that.
That sounds good in theory. But I don’t think any of the kids with the profiles built to get into top20 colleges just love taking every AP class possible, grinding through 4 hrs of high school (and probably middle school too) and building “non profit” organizations. They are only doing this to get into top school to maximize professional opportunities as adults. Either your kid is willing and wants to put into the effort or they aren’t. But I really don’t think it has anything to do with the student actually enjoying it
Do you know kids admitted to top 20 schools? The ones I know (including two to Yale, one to Brown this year) do not fit this profile at all. They are smart, intrinsically motivated kids who pursued stuff they enjoyed and were really good at it. Sure, maybe they made some marginal decisions to boost rigor—e.g., taking AP foreign language even though they don’t love the subject—but they didn’t do the stuff people on here assume is necessary to get into a top school.
Anonymous wrote:Sadly this is not possible in the DMV at a competitive school. I think our kids will have so many issues when they grow up and the kids that led balanced lives and went to mediocre schools will turn out much better. More confident and happier.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on where others end up. If many kids in BC you will have a problem. But this is merely stating the obvious.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is in 9th grade at a private school, not DC area but another metro region. School is rigorous but also has a real mix of kids, and I wouldn't describe it as ultra-high pressure though there are some really smart students. DS is in all honors classes and doing well, but working hard, he is definitely being challenged. We're looking ahead to the rest of high school and trying to get a decent sense of where he might end up, curricularly, and trying to figure out what is a good fit for him, will maximize his college chances, and give him a decent school-life balance. I would say he is a bright kid (as we often say about our kids), and he is quite strong in most subjects without wildly excelling at any. Just a good all-around student, but not a math whiz or writing prodigy or anything like that. I have no idea what he will end up studying and becoming professionally, though could see him in some social science, like economics, political science, that sort of thing. But it's really tough to tell. Currently he loves physics and history. His school offers the "big" AP classes but not the same variety as many public school districts do.
For math he's on track to end with AP Calc AB, because his school requires AB as a prerequisite to BC, and he is currently in Honors Geometry. Is maxing out at Calc AB these days considered not all that great? I really have no idea. He *really* doesn't want to take summer math, and I'm not inclined to force him and worry he just wouldn't take it in, but am genuinly confused how important it is to end with AP Calc BC. I think he will almost certainly take AP Physics and either AP Chem or AP Bio, or maybe both. Could take AP Stats. Also APUSH and AP Spanish. He has some solid extracurriculars he's passionate about and has a job, but again, not a superstar on the extracurricular front, just a nice thoughtful kid with activities he genuinely enjoys and is working to nurture.
We're not imagining tippy top schools--honestly I have no idea what schools we're imagining--but I don't want to close off options and it seems like it's smart to think about the "track" he's on and whether it should be modified in any way, just to keep options open. I welcome any advice particularly about the math question. Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Sadly this is not possible in the DMV at a competitive school. I think our kids will have so many issues when they grow up and the kids that led balanced lives and went to mediocre schools will turn out much better. More confident and happier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are something like 2000 4-year colleges and universities. Regardless of whether he takes calc AB or BC, there will be a good fit for him.
There are two approaches to college. One is too pick the kind of school you want and then forces your son to be the kind of high school student who can get in. The second approach is to choose the high school classes and experience that are best for your son's skills and temperament and then see what colleges follow from that.
That sounds good in theory. But I don’t think any of the kids with the profiles built to get into top20 colleges just love taking every AP class possible, grinding through 4 hrs of high school (and probably middle school too) and building “non profit” organizations. They are only doing this to get into top school to maximize professional opportunities as adults. Either your kid is willing and wants to put into the effort or they aren’t. But I really don’t think it has anything to do with the student actually enjoying it
Anonymous wrote:There are something like 2000 4-year colleges and universities. Regardless of whether he takes calc AB or BC, there will be a good fit for him.
There are two approaches to college. One is too pick the kind of school you want and then forces your son to be the kind of high school student who can get in. The second approach is to choose the high school classes and experience that are best for your son's skills and temperament and then see what colleges follow from that.
Anonymous wrote:^^^False. Grades and SAT scores are far more important than maxing out Apps or taking every possible rigorous class, even for highly competitive schools. Yeah, if you’re aiming for MIT you should try for the highest level of math, but OP has said that the DC isn’t a math wiz so schools like MIT and Caltech won’t be on the table.