Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to graduate in 3 years if you accumulate enough AP credits (at the schools that accept them)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way the elite schools do it is best: they have requirements for classes across disciplines, but they can be taken anytime in the 4 yrs, they are typically seminar style that dive deep into an area, many times there are upper level courses that count toward it. They are much harder than AP across the board, as are 90% of courses at top schools, which is why no AP credit is given for most APs at these schools (AP or testing is used for placing into higher levels of calculus and sometimes sciences and foreign language).
The students do not have to complete them before starting courses toward their major(s) or concentration. Ivies, Hopkins, stanford, top SLACs, William and Mary, Wake, Duke, WashU and dozens more do it this way.
Only the large publics have it such that the first 2 yrs are predominantly gen-ed and there is high overlap with AP.
Not the case with my oldest at UMD. 1 to 2 gen ed classes a semester.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not talking about elite institutions like Yale or Columbia where the breadth requirements are part of a curated humanistic curriculum.
But it seems at say, UMCP or Penn State, a lot of time is spent on these requirements, more than a third of the degree in the arts and sciences. I can see the merit, but in practice it seems to lean to a lot of undisciplined and unfocused learning. In a lot of ways it's like high school again - take your English, take your math, take your foreign language, take your gym etc. In fact the gen-ed requirements are often more extensive than the major to which students are only devoting about 30% of the degree to.
Maybe this is why in a lot of countries the bachelor's degree is 3 years because gen-ed is mainly an American thing.
Many kids can't write so classes with writing are good education.
In other words, remedial education. Why isn't this learned in high school?
Lucy Calkins and her "Writers Workshop" crap. Her "Readers Workshop" is why John and Jane do not read well.
The whole "workshop" approach to teaching -- common in elementary schools across the country until recently - is pedagogically unsound. Most students are unable to learn effectively with that approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way the elite schools do it is best: they have requirements for classes across disciplines, but they can be taken anytime in the 4 yrs, they are typically seminar style that dive deep into an area, many times there are upper level courses that count toward it. They are much harder than AP across the board, as are 90% of courses at top schools, which is why no AP credit is given for most APs at these schools (AP or testing is used for placing into higher levels of calculus and sometimes sciences and foreign language).
The students do not have to complete them before starting courses toward their major(s) or concentration. Ivies, Hopkins, stanford, top SLACs, William and Mary, Wake, Duke, WashU and dozens more do it this way.
Only the large publics have it such that the first 2 yrs are predominantly gen-ed and there is high overlap with AP.
Not the case with my oldest at UMD. 1 to 2 gen ed classes a semester.
They're still rather rudimentary courses, even if you wait 4 years to complete them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way the elite schools do it is best: they have requirements for classes across disciplines, but they can be taken anytime in the 4 yrs, they are typically seminar style that dive deep into an area, many times there are upper level courses that count toward it. They are much harder than AP across the board, as are 90% of courses at top schools, which is why no AP credit is given for most APs at these schools (AP or testing is used for placing into higher levels of calculus and sometimes sciences and foreign language).
The students do not have to complete them before starting courses toward their major(s) or concentration. Ivies, Hopkins, stanford, top SLACs, William and Mary, Wake, Duke, WashU and dozens more do it this way.
Only the large publics have it such that the first 2 yrs are predominantly gen-ed and there is high overlap with AP.
Not the case with my oldest at UMD. 1 to 2 gen ed classes a semester.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to graduate in 3 years if you accumulate enough AP credits (at the schools that accept them)?
Yes. I know a ton of kids who have done it at UVA.
The T10s/Ivies and a lot of privates do not accept any AP credits. They are not equivalent to a college course in any manner.
How many is a ton?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to graduate in 3 years if you accumulate enough AP credits (at the schools that accept them)?
Yes. I know a ton of kids who have done it at UVA.
The T10s/Ivies and a lot of privates do not accept any AP credits. They are not equivalent to a college course in any manner.
Anonymous wrote:The way the elite schools do it is best: they have requirements for classes across disciplines, but they can be taken anytime in the 4 yrs, they are typically seminar style that dive deep into an area, many times there are upper level courses that count toward it. They are much harder than AP across the board, as are 90% of courses at top schools, which is why no AP credit is given for most APs at these schools (AP or testing is used for placing into higher levels of calculus and sometimes sciences and foreign language).
The students do not have to complete them before starting courses toward their major(s) or concentration. Ivies, Hopkins, stanford, top SLACs, William and Mary, Wake, Duke, WashU and dozens more do it this way.
Only the large publics have it such that the first 2 yrs are predominantly gen-ed and there is high overlap with AP.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not talking about elite institutions like Yale or Columbia where the breadth requirements are part of a curated humanistic curriculum.
But it seems at say, UMCP or Penn State, a lot of time is spent on these requirements, more than a third of the degree in the arts and sciences. I can see the merit, but in practice it seems to lean to a lot of undisciplined and unfocused learning. In a lot of ways it's like high school again - take your English, take your math, take your foreign language, take your gym etc. In fact the gen-ed requirements are often more extensive than the major to which students are only devoting about 30% of the degree to.
Maybe this is why in a lot of countries the bachelor's degree is 3 years because gen-ed is mainly an American thing.
Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to graduate in 3 years if you accumulate enough AP credits (at the schools that accept them)?
Anonymous wrote:Is it possible to graduate in 3 years if you accumulate enough AP credits (at the schools that accept them)?