Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, there are several schools in the top 10-15 UK rankings that your kid can apply to without APs outside of St Andrews. It also depends on the program at these schools.
Like it was already said earlier, for Oxford/LSE/Cambrigde you have no choice. You need as many 5’s as you can get. Plus some of them have additional tests/interviews.
If your kid doesnt want to self study for APs, then kiss goodbye to some of these schools.
My 3 kids studied in the UK. Oldest at Oxford, second one at Bristol and one at St Andrews.
Second kid went to a different school with no APs (not an IB school either). But they offered a ton of Dual Credit courses with a local university. He had 36 dual credits at A. He applied without APs thought UCAS and got into Exeter, Bristol, Edinburgh and St Andrews.
1st and 3rd one went to the same AP school. 1st one had 7 APs at 5. 3rd kid had 4 APs at 5 and 3 at 4.
They all scored between 1480 and 1570 in the SAT.
OP here. Was this a DC private that offers dual credit courses with a university? I understand about not needing to do APs for the majority of universities, but the difficulty I’m finding is that most state the equivalent of a 5 in an AP course is a grades of A or A+ in an honours class and those grades are really tough to get in her school.
We are not in DC. But yes, a private that had a dual credit program with a university. For Oxbridge/LSE/Imperial and some UCL courses, Durham and a few others it is APs or bust. As I mentioned, my 2nd kid got in those 4 schools I mentioned without APs. His Dual Credit Grades were enough in combination with his SAT, despite those schools saying he needed some APs….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, there are several schools in the top 10-15 UK rankings that your kid can apply to without APs outside of St Andrews. It also depends on the program at these schools.
Like it was already said earlier, for Oxford/LSE/Cambrigde you have no choice. You need as many 5’s as you can get. Plus some of them have additional tests/interviews.
If your kid doesnt want to self study for APs, then kiss goodbye to some of these schools.
My 3 kids studied in the UK. Oldest at Oxford, second one at Bristol and one at St Andrews.
Second kid went to a different school with no APs (not an IB school either). But they offered a ton of Dual Credit courses with a local university. He had 36 dual credits at A. He applied without APs thought UCAS and got into Exeter, Bristol, Edinburgh and St Andrews.
1st and 3rd one went to the same AP school. 1st one had 7 APs at 5. 3rd kid had 4 APs at 5 and 3 at 4.
They all scored between 1480 and 1570 in the SAT.
OP here. Was this a DC private that offers dual credit courses with a university? I understand about not needing to do APs for the majority of universities, but the difficulty I’m finding is that most state the equivalent of a 5 in an AP course is a grades of A or A+ in an honours class and those grades are really tough to get in her school.
Anonymous wrote:For any parents who have had kids attend and graduate from UK schools, can you comment on their experience getting summer internships, getting jobs upon graduation or applying to law/medschool back in the US? That is our concern about whether a UK degree is a good option, esp if looking a notch below oxbridge, LSE etc which likely have international and US recognition
Anonymous wrote:Also just to know, they don’t care about GPA/transcript, academic qualifications are assessed on basis of the standardized tests. General extracurriculars, like community service, nonprofits, youtubers/social media entrpreneurs, athletics, are not important, unless it is of an academic nature, like Olympiads, competitions, which you can relate to how you’ve explored/deepened your academic interests in your proposed field of study. Basically the UK looks for completely things in students.
Anonymous wrote:Look, there are several schools in the top 10-15 UK rankings that your kid can apply to without APs outside of St Andrews. It also depends on the program at these schools.
Like it was already said earlier, for Oxford/LSE/Cambrigde you have no choice. You need as many 5’s as you can get. Plus some of them have additional tests/interviews.
If your kid doesnt want to self study for APs, then kiss goodbye to some of these schools.
My 3 kids studied in the UK. Oldest at Oxford, second one at Bristol and one at St Andrews.
Second kid went to a different school with no APs (not an IB school either). But they offered a ton of Dual Credit courses with a local university. He had 36 dual credits at A. He applied without APs thought UCAS and got into Exeter, Bristol, Edinburgh and St Andrews.
1st and 3rd one went to the same AP school. 1st one had 7 APs at 5. 3rd kid had 4 APs at 5 and 3 at 4.
They all scored between 1480 and 1570 in the SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Just spitballing here but it might be easier to self study for the math and science APs rather than the social studies ones. As a PP mentioned, there's a fair amount of 'teaching to the test' in AP classes, including teacher feedback on essay structure. The math/science open ended questions may have less nuance to what is expected, structure-wise.
Question for folks who know-- I assumed than when they want 2, 3, or 4 APs with score of 5, then a) they wanted the 'core' APs (calc, bio, us history, foreign language etc) rather than the many other APs (psych, human geography, environmental science, etc.). Is that not the case?
And a follow-on. Is this a kind of threshold thing where once you hit the minimum requirement, they look at other aspects of your application? Or is that the stated minumum number but in reality no one is admitted without some larger number of APs with 5s?