Anonymous wrote:I think it is a bit of a crapshoot how colleges view the IB. That said, I think it is generally a much better foundation for studying once you are at college than AP. Less memorization, more writing/analysis. My kid is very glad she did it now. Something to consider if you are one of the rare people that cares about education vs gaming the college application system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The IB program at Einstein was a disaster for my kid. His English and History classes leading up to it didn't have hardly any writing, so he was not prepared for the level of writing required by the IB classes. And his college did not give him any credit for his IB scores (5 to 7). I wish we had gone all AP.
Writing at Einstein is a huge disappointment. They read 2-3 books a year and only write short paragraph responses. No long papers.
In IB English? Not sure how that’s possible, if they’re following the IB curriculum.
The HL IB curriculum (which Einstein makes all diploma candidates take) requires about a dozen novels over the a years, a bunch of poetry and some short stories, as well as a long paper for the IA. My kid’s teacher has had them—from the start—writing increasingly longer essays in preparation for the IA.
Honors English. We are on our second book of the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The IB program at Einstein was a disaster for my kid. His English and History classes leading up to it didn't have hardly any writing, so he was not prepared for the level of writing required by the IB classes. And his college did not give him any credit for his IB scores (5 to 7). I wish we had gone all AP.
Writing at Einstein is a huge disappointment. They read 2-3 books a year and only write short paragraph responses. No long papers.
In IB English? Not sure how that’s possible, if they’re following the IB curriculum.
The HL IB curriculum (which Einstein makes all diploma candidates take) requires about a dozen novels over the a years, a bunch of poetry and some short stories, as well as a long paper for the IA. My kid’s teacher has had them—from the start—writing increasingly longer essays in preparation for the IA.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of the IB and AP classes are mixed anyway. What school are you at? I think it is for kids who have strong writing skills and like to write.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of the IB and AP classes are mixed anyway. What school are you at? I think it is for kids who have strong writing skills and like to write.
The above makes no sense. Complete different curriculum than APs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The IB program at Einstein was a disaster for my kid. His English and History classes leading up to it didn't have hardly any writing, so he was not prepared for the level of writing required by the IB classes. And his college did not give him any credit for his IB scores (5 to 7). I wish we had gone all AP.
Writing at Einstein is a huge disappointment. They read 2-3 books a year and only write short paragraph responses. No long papers.
In IB English? Not sure how that’s possible, if they’re following the IB curriculum.
The HL IB curriculum (which Einstein makes all diploma candidates take) requires about a dozen novels over the a years, a bunch of poetry and some short stories, as well as a long paper for the IA. My kid’s teacher has had them—from the start—writing increasingly longer essays in preparation for the IA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The IB program at Einstein was a disaster for my kid. His English and History classes leading up to it didn't have hardly any writing, so he was not prepared for the level of writing required by the IB classes. And his college did not give him any credit for his IB scores (5 to 7). I wish we had gone all AP.
Writing at Einstein is a huge disappointment. They read 2-3 books a year and only write short paragraph responses. No long papers.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is a bit of a crapshoot how colleges view the IB. That said, I think it is generally a much better foundation for studying once you are at college than AP. Less memorization, more writing/analysis. My kid is very glad she did it now. Something to consider if you are one of the rare people that cares about education vs gaming the college application system.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of the IB and AP classes are mixed anyway. What school are you at? I think it is for kids who have strong writing skills and like to write.
Anonymous wrote:The IB world history HL was more in-depth reading and writing than AP courses. Less memorizing although there is that, but more analysis and depth to writing requirements. Not teaching to the test so much. My kid loved it.
Anonymous wrote:The IB program at Einstein was a disaster for my kid. His English and History classes leading up to it didn't have hardly any writing, so he was not prepared for the level of writing required by the IB classes. And his college did not give him any credit for his IB scores (5 to 7). I wish we had gone all AP.
Anonymous wrote:The IB program at Einstein was a disaster for my kid. His English and History classes leading up to it didn't have hardly any writing, so he was not prepared for the level of writing required by the IB classes. And his college did not give him any credit for his IB scores (5 to 7). I wish we had gone all AP.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of the IB and AP classes are mixed anyway. What school are you at? I think it is for kids who have strong writing skills and like to write.