Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not really. Just have the money, average GPA and test scores, or else be a minority or visa-holder, and you are a shoe in.
Just be a recruited athlete. Ivy League with 3 APs. Suckers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these super advanced MCPS kids do not impress admissions people. It is perfectly fine to take Calc as a senior. Once again it is the stupid DMV bias here. Get out of your bubble.
Oh. I must have missed the part where MCPS kids are banned from elite universities and don’t excel in NMSF and win national awards.
Some kid who takes calculus in the womb in DMV is not seen as being any better than a kid who takes it as a senior, all other things being equal. Yet so many people here get their panties in a bunch because their kids aren't taking calc and physics and whatever soon enough. Doesn't matter.
Stuy, Bronx Science, Dalton, Trinity, Horace Mann, Scarsdale, Millburn kids don't do any of this.
Anonymous wrote:Not really. Just have the money, average GPA and test scores, or else be a minority or visa-holder, and you are a shoe in.
Anonymous wrote:Colleges can tell happy kids. They can tell curated kids. They can tell over-bearing parents. The harder you try, the worse it will be. Just relax.
Anonymous wrote:It actually starts with marriage. Pick a partner with the best possible genes. Then have them eat a ton of choline and DHA (but not EPA) during pregnancy and breastfeeding period. Etc. etc.
Anonymous wrote:The biggest thing is math placement. If you don’t get into an advanced track early on, you probably won’t be able to take AP calculus in high school, which is a problem if you want to major in STEM.
It also matters when it comes to extracurriculars like sports, music, or STEM competitions. It’s extremely hard to do well in those activities if you don’t start early well before high school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest thing is math placement. If you don’t get into an advanced track early on, you probably won’t be able to take AP calculus in high school, which is a problem if you want to major in STEM.
It also matters when it comes to extracurriculars like sports, music, or STEM competitions. It’s extremely hard to do well in those activities if you don’t start early well before high school
One thing I've noticed is that private schools all have algebra in 8th, geometry in 10th, and algebra 2 in 11th. Algebra is required to do well on SATs so this is critical. Many public schools don't start algebra 1 until 9th.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these super advanced MCPS kids do not impress admissions people. It is perfectly fine to take Calc as a senior. Once again it is the stupid DMV bias here. Get out of your bubble.
Oh. I must have missed the part where MCPS kids are banned from elite universities and don’t excel in NMSF and win national awards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never seen a public school that didn't allow algebra until 9th, excluding that one California policyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest thing is math placement. If you don’t get into an advanced track early on, you probably won’t be able to take AP calculus in high school, which is a problem if you want to major in STEM.
It also matters when it comes to extracurriculars like sports, music, or STEM competitions. It’s extremely hard to do well in those activities if you don’t start early well before high school
One thing I've noticed is that private schools all have algebra in 8th, geometry in 10th, and algebra 2 in 11th. Algebra is required to do well on SATs so this is critical. Many public schools don't start algebra 1 until 9th.
My kid took algebra 1 in 7th grade along with a third of his MCPS classmates. Some public school kids even take it in 6th grade.
Make sense when so many kids take multivariable calculus or AP physics C in high school, which requires you to take calculus by 9th or 10th grade
Anonymous wrote:It actually starts with marriage. Pick a partner with the best possible genes. Then have them eat a ton of choline and DHA (but not EPA) during pregnancy and breastfeeding period. Etc. etc.
!Anonymous wrote:All of these super advanced MCPS kids do not impress admissions people. It is perfectly fine to take Calc as a senior. Once again it is the stupid DMV bias here. Get out of your bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never seen a public school that didn't allow algebra until 9th, excluding that one California policyAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The biggest thing is math placement. If you don’t get into an advanced track early on, you probably won’t be able to take AP calculus in high school, which is a problem if you want to major in STEM.
It also matters when it comes to extracurriculars like sports, music, or STEM competitions. It’s extremely hard to do well in those activities if you don’t start early well before high school
One thing I've noticed is that private schools all have algebra in 8th, geometry in 10th, and algebra 2 in 11th. Algebra is required to do well on SATs so this is critical. Many public schools don't start algebra 1 until 9th.
My kid took algebra 1 in 7th grade along with a third of his MCPS classmates. Some public school kids even take it in 6th grade.