Anonymous wrote:Why private schools eliminated AP courses but kept the exams? Doesn’t make much sense. It looks like a downgrade of the product.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, anonymous forum. For those in private that no longer have AP classes, why are you having your kids take a bunch of AP tests? What does it get you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don’t pretend that the three year HYP experience is equivalent to or better than the four year one. You’re choosing to see undergrad as transactional but many if not most of us don’t.
No one is gunning for a 3 year HYP experience. Many kids are going on to publics where kids without APs will be behind their peers coming in with tons of credit. It allows flexibility of taking more different courses versus retaking a language or math they’ve already taken.
Anonymous wrote:Just don’t pretend that the three year HYP experience is equivalent to or better than the four year one. You’re choosing to see undergrad as transactional but many if not most of us don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Why private schools eliminated AP courses but kept the exams? Doesn’t make much sense. It looks like a downgrade of the product.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised no one has thrown out "Yale wants to see AP scores" yet.
You can tell DCUM until you're blue on the face that AP exam scores barely count for admissions at the overwhelming majority of schools. You can remind it that most students won't even have taken half or more of their AP exams before getting college application results because for most students senior year is the most AP heavy.
Etc.
They will still insist that they matter.
They're wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only for the college credit. I really don’t think AP test scores matter for admission. The senior year ones arrive too late so it would only be the ones before that in an application. The class grade matters obviously but 4/5s are not going to impress anyone.
Not true at all in the abstract, but in certain situations it might not matter, specifically, when the kid already demonstrates sufficient achievement in that area. Sometimes that's fulfilled by competing in science competitions, or by being a yearbook editor and winning writing competitions, or for foreign language, taking that country's proficiency test. The problem is, OP, if someone at your non-AP school starts submitting AP scores, then it becomes a tool to stand out compared to classmates.
And of course AP exams are taken before senior year. Kids take them at any and all points in their high school career.