Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honors is also a good way to get your kid a better peer group in schools where the non-honors can be trouble
This.
Note that the teachers can't say this at the school events discussing HS course selection.
This is what I've heard from countless actual high school students, and it infuriates me. Honors is meaningless and is basically the regular level since the majority of students land there. The more type A students end up in APs (even freshman year), and the kids who couldn't care less about school are placed in regular classes.
The homework is ridiculous. Too much, especially for regular kids. Those kids would be better served in regular classes, but then they have to deal with the disruptive students (the stories I've heard are shocking).
I'm conflicted (oldest is in MS). I know a bright kid who should have been in honors classes with his peer group, but his parents enrolled him in regular for freshman year...and he's earning straight As. It's not easy...there's still tons of homework. I'm sure someone will comment on weighted gpa and college admissions, but if the goal is to end up at umcp (whether directly or after a semester at MC) does it matter?
UMCP is not easy to get into. Look at their admissions stats. You will be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honors is also a good way to get your kid a better peer group in schools where the non-honors can be trouble
This.
Note that the teachers can't say this at the school events discussing HS course selection.
This is what I've heard from countless actual high school students, and it infuriates me. Honors is meaningless and is basically the regular level since the majority of students land there. The more type A students end up in APs (even freshman year), and the kids who couldn't care less about school are placed in regular classes.
The homework is ridiculous. Too much, especially for regular kids. Those kids would be better served in regular classes, but then they have to deal with the disruptive students (the stories I've heard are shocking).
I'm conflicted (oldest is in MS). I know a bright kid who should have been in honors classes with his peer group, but his parents enrolled him in regular for freshman year...and he's earning straight As. It's not easy...there's still tons of homework. I'm sure someone will comment on weighted gpa and college admissions, but if the goal is to end up at umcp (whether directly or after a semester at MC) does it matter?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish the posters replying to this thread would identify their children's high schools when responding! My kids are at Pyle Middle School which also enrolls ALL the kids in honors so it is very hard to know what a "real" honors class in high school will be like.
How do you know that all the kids at Pyle get enrolled in honors courses? I have an 8th grader there, and I know what he was recommended for, but I have no idea about other kids. Is this posted somewhere? In my son's case, most of the recommendations were for honors, but one was for AP NSL government. I don't know the difference between honors and AP, but I guess they'll tell us at the meeting next week --- if anyone has info there, I'd appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish the posters replying to this thread would identify their children's high schools when responding! My kids are at Pyle Middle School which also enrolls ALL the kids in honors so it is very hard to know what a "real" honors class in high school will be like.
How do you know that all the kids at Pyle get enrolled in honors courses? I have an 8th grader there, and I know what he was recommended for, but I have no idea about other kids. Is this posted somewhere? In my son's case, most of the recommendations were for honors, but one was for AP NSL government. I don't know the difference between honors and AP, but I guess they'll tell us at the meeting next week --- if anyone has info there, I'd appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:I wish the posters replying to this thread would identify their children's high schools when responding! My kids are at Pyle Middle School which also enrolls ALL the kids in honors so it is very hard to know what a "real" honors class in high school will be like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take honors if your DC can handle. It gives tremendous wGPA boost.
This. It saddens me that parents not in the know believe that "honors" is so much harder that it should be avoided. Unweighted GPA points so significantly change a GOA that it has a serious negative effect on college admissions.
To me non-honors enrollment in mixed classes is the modern equivalent of separate but equal...
Elite colleges no longer care nearly as much about GPA, weighted or unweighted, as they did a generation ago. They care about students pursuing academic challenge, evidence of intellectual curiosity, academic awards and accomplishments, writing skills, extra-curricular accomplishments and standardized test scores. I have a nephew who was ranked 60th in his class when he graduated from a MoCo public school last year, yet fared better in college admissions than anybody in the top ten (no, he's not an athlete, he won various science prizes, scored 800s on SAT subject tests and 5s on half a dozen APs). How do I know this? I earn a good living as an independent college counselor.
You must be a terrible college counselor. Top tiers don't care because almost everyone has perfect stats. Lower tier schools certainly do care about GPAs - w and uw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take honors if your DC can handle. It gives tremendous wGPA boost.
This. It saddens me that parents not in the know believe that "honors" is so much harder that it should be avoided. Unweighted GPA points so significantly change a GOA that it has a serious negative effect on college admissions.
To me non-honors enrollment in mixed classes is the modern equivalent of separate but equal...
Elite colleges no longer care nearly as much about GPA, weighted or unweighted, as they did a generation ago. They care about students pursuing academic challenge, evidence of intellectual curiosity, academic awards and accomplishments, writing skills, extra-curricular accomplishments and standardized test scores. I have a nephew who was ranked 60th in his class when he graduated from a MoCo public school last year, yet fared better in college admissions than anybody in the top ten (no, he's not an athlete, he won various science prizes, scored 800s on SAT subject tests and 5s on half a dozen APs). How do I know this? I earn a good living as an independent college counselor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take honors if your DC can handle. It gives tremendous wGPA boost.
This. It saddens me that parents not in the know believe that "honors" is so much harder that it should be avoided. Unweighted GPA points so significantly change a GOA that it has a serious negative effect on college admissions.
To me non-honors enrollment in mixed classes is the modern equivalent of separate but equal...
Elite colleges no longer care nearly as much about GPA, weighted or unweighted, as they did a generation ago. They care about students pursuing academic challenge, evidence of intellectual curiosity, academic awards and accomplishments, writing skills, extra-curricular accomplishments and standardized test scores. I have a nephew who was ranked 60th in his class when he graduated from a MoCo public school last year, yet fared better in college admissions than anybody in the top ten (no, he's not an athlete, he won various science prizes, scored 800s on SAT subject tests and 5s on half a dozen APs). How do I know this? I earn a good living as an independent college counselor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take honors if your DC can handle. It gives tremendous wGPA boost.
This. It saddens me that parents not in the know believe that "honors" is so much harder that it should be avoided. Unweighted GPA points so significantly change a GOA that it has a serious negative effect on college admissions.
To me non-honors enrollment in mixed classes is the modern equivalent of separate but equal...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take honors if your DC can handle. It gives tremendous wGPA boost.
This. It saddens me that parents not in the know believe that "honors" is so much harder that it should be avoided. Unweighted GPA points so significantly change a GOA that it has a serious negative effect on college admissions.
To me non-honors enrollment in mixed classes is the modern equivalent of separate but equal...