Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you looked at the websites of the schools you are considering? I cannot find even one school that does not detail their high school science curriculum and courses.
Let’s normalize looking for answers we can find ourselves for the schools we are thinking about!
I did. For Sidwell, for example, I can't find much more detailed course descriptions. But maybe they are hidden somewhere in a course catalogue.
https://www.sidwell.edu/academics/upper-school/science
For Holton Arms, it seems just Physics and Honor Physics.
GDS seems to offer more advanced physics topics.
Still, it seems all over the place, and two years are already super minimal to learn physics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does everyone take Physics in private HS? How many years do they take it? What is Honor Physics? Is it only one year? What about the school which doesn't offer AP Physics?
I asked this is I know some students might never take a physics class in their lives. This is scary for me.
I never took physics and am a successful attorney who probably earns much more than the average physicist or engineer.
Not taking physics is not scary- it’s just a different path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does everyone take Physics in private HS? How many years do they take it? What is Honor Physics? Is it only one year? What about the school which doesn't offer AP Physics?
I asked this is I know some students might never take a physics class in their lives. This is scary for me.
I never took physics and am a successful attorney who probably earns much more than the average physicist or engineer.
Not taking physics is not scary- it’s just a different path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does everyone take Physics in private HS? How many years do they take it? What is Honor Physics? Is it only one year? What about the school which doesn't offer AP Physics?
I asked this is I know some students might never take a physics class in their lives. This is scary for me.
Anonymous wrote:So your school's kids can never take more than two science APs?Anonymous wrote:A lot of school have flipped from the old standard bio-chem-phys order to phys-chem-bio.
At DC’s school, students must take all three (there are some levels available depending on math ability and honors placement, but all students must take non-AP of all three), phys-chem-bio. Students can double up and take a second science in 11th and one or two sciences in 12th, with a variety of options including AP Physics I or C, AP Chem, and AP Bio as well as APES, AP Psych, and non-AP electives like Food Chemistry, Forensics, or Marine Bio.
So your school's kids can never take more than two science APs?Anonymous wrote:A lot of school have flipped from the old standard bio-chem-phys order to phys-chem-bio.
At DC’s school, students must take all three (there are some levels available depending on math ability and honors placement, but all students must take non-AP of all three), phys-chem-bio. Students can double up and take a second science in 11th and one or two sciences in 12th, with a variety of options including AP Physics I or C, AP Chem, and AP Bio as well as APES, AP Psych, and non-AP electives like Food Chemistry, Forensics, or Marine Bio.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exceptions exist for everything in HS, so not "everyone".
A very common path is to take Physics, Chemistry, and also Biology at some point in HS. The sequence varies from school to school.
For a student planning to go into engineering or Physics in college, then it is common to take multiple years of Physics, but exceptions will exist as with everything else in HS.
If a school does not offer AP Physics, then colleges do not expect one to have taken it.
Same applies for Honors Physics -- if school does not offer Honors Physics then colleges do not expect one to take it.
My question is in a good independent school, can a typical student (independent of majors) take two years of physics? Are there more than two Physics courses offered?
Yes. As noted, the typical sequence is physics 9th grade, chemistry 10th grade, bio 11th grade, leaving 12th grade open for an advanced science class. Most privates offer advanced physics, advanced bio and other options that year.
Anonymous wrote:Standard as a Freshman in my son’s school. It’s also his worst class for what it’s worth. After some work, he got to a C+
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you looked at the websites of the schools you are considering? I cannot find even one school that does not detail their high school science curriculum and courses.
Let’s normalize looking for answers we can find ourselves for the schools we are thinking about!
I did. For Sidwell, for example, I can't find much more detailed course descriptions. But maybe they are hidden somewhere in a course catalogue.
https://www.sidwell.edu/academics/upper-school/science
For Holton Arms, it seems just Physics and Honor Physics.
GDS seems to offer more advanced physics topics.
Still, it seems all over the place, and two years are already super minimal to learn physics.
Anonymous wrote:Have you looked at the websites of the schools you are considering? I cannot find even one school that does not detail their high school science curriculum and courses.
Let’s normalize looking for answers we can find ourselves for the schools we are thinking about!