Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If from a decently resourced public school, AP Calc BC by sophomore year is recommended. Many of the replies are from private school parents who are ignorant of the gate-keeping of public school students to Ivies. A public school student at a middle or upper-middle class high school has to be 10X the scholar a private school student has to be.
The majority of Princeton's non-hooked students took math above Calculus BC. At MIT, more than 50% of unhooked public school students had math higher than BC.
I am fairly sure that basically zero kids at Stuy, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, etc. do calc as sophomores, and I don't think many even do it as a junior. And they do fine with college acceptances and once they get to college.
Colleges want kids who do the best with what is offered. So the schools don't need to offer these things to keep up with each other. Parents are being bamboozled. But the damage is done and it isn't being changed. So now you are forced to do it. Which is dumb.
Anonymous wrote:If from a decently resourced public school, AP Calc BC by sophomore year is recommended. Many of the replies are from private school parents who are ignorant of the gate-keeping of public school students to Ivies. A public school student at a middle or upper-middle class high school has to be 10X the scholar a private school student has to be.
The majority of Princeton's non-hooked students took math above Calculus BC. At MIT, more than 50% of unhooked public school students had math higher than BC.
Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't this be based on individual ability and interests?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are asking because of college admissions, an anecdote
Our HS offers courses beyond MV/LA, seminar style classes in various math topics.
Every year for the past 4 years a few kids go beyond that and take high-level math courses at a local university (a t30).
This year was the first time in 8 years a kid from my kid's hs was accepted at MIT. BC Calc senior year. No math awards, teams, competitions. No national awards. Just regular kid stuff.
Go figure
Thank you for this helpful example.
Too many parents are in their suburban magnet school bubble and think their little snowflakes are the next Einstein. Slow down. Your kid likely isn't that smart. And neither are the kids around them. The schools are doing your kids a dis-service by pushing them forward so fast. Relax. Enjoy life. Play a sport. Watch trash on TV or Youtube or TikTok or whatever else. Fool around with the opposite gender (or your gender if that's what floats your boat).
For most careers, that will serve you a lot better than taking MV in the womb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are asking because of college admissions, an anecdote
Our HS offers courses beyond MV/LA, seminar style classes in various math topics.
Every year for the past 4 years a few kids go beyond that and take high-level math courses at a local university (a t30).
This year was the first time in 8 years a kid from my kid's hs was accepted at MIT. BC Calc senior year. No math awards, teams, competitions. No national awards. Just regular kid stuff.
Go figure
Thank you for this helpful example.
Too many parents are in their suburban magnet school bubble and think their little snowflakes are the next Einstein. Slow down. Your kid likely isn't that smart. And neither are the kids around them. The schools are doing your kids a dis-service by pushing them forward so fast. Relax. Enjoy life. Play a sport. Watch trash on TV or Youtube or TikTok or whatever else. Fool around with the opposite gender (or your gender if that's what floats your boat).
For most careers, that will serve you a lot better than taking MV in the womb.
Well, you are taking what I said a bit far. I have no idea if the kid did watched trash on youtube or tik tok from time to time. But that's obviously not what he put on his application/liknked in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are asking because of college admissions, an anecdote
Our HS offers courses beyond MV/LA, seminar style classes in various math topics.
Every year for the past 4 years a few kids go beyond that and take high-level math courses at a local university (a t30).
This year was the first time in 8 years a kid from my kid's hs was accepted at MIT. BC Calc senior year. No math awards, teams, competitions. No national awards. Just regular kid stuff.
Go figure
Thank you for this helpful example.
Too many parents are in their suburban magnet school bubble and think their little snowflakes are the next Einstein. Slow down. Your kid likely isn't that smart. And neither are the kids around them. The schools are doing your kids a dis-service by pushing them forward so fast. Relax. Enjoy life. Play a sport. Watch trash on TV or Youtube or TikTok or whatever else. Fool around with the opposite gender (or your gender if that's what floats your boat).
For most careers, that will serve you a lot better than taking MV in the womb.
Anonymous wrote:If you are asking because of college admissions, an anecdote
Our HS offers courses beyond MV/LA, seminar style classes in various math topics.
Every year for the past 4 years a few kids go beyond that and take high-level math courses at a local university (a t30).
This year was the first time in 8 years a kid from my kid's hs was accepted at MIT. BC Calc senior year. No math awards, teams, competitions. No national awards. Just regular kid stuff.
Go figure
Anonymous wrote:Which is better Calculus AB or BC? Both are not needed, correct?
Anonymous wrote:FCPS now has an option for Algebra 1 honors in 6th grade for a cohort of students. Better to take this “hardest” math path with possible lower grades, vs stronger grades but will be behind some peers? Which do colleges prefer? Realize this is ridiculous question since only in sixth grade, but have to make a choice.