Anonymous wrote:Awesome for what? How does it help? DC won't graduate any earlier, at least from the more well known institutions. I get that it may help distributions, but there are downsides as well (sometimes you want to take Micro where you are majoring in Econ).
Anonymous wrote:Awesome for what? How does it help? DC won't graduate any earlier, at least from the more well known institutions. I get that it may help distributions, but there are downsides as well (sometimes you want to take Micro where you are majoring in Econ).
Anonymous wrote:^^^
Who cares that it didn’t help with the application for admission?
My kid had a full year of college credits in the bag.
So awesome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC was a National AP scholar. He got the same postcard size certificate as for the AP Scholar with Distinction. Neither made any difference in college admissions or life.
How would you know it made no difference?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard University admitted about 1650 undergraduate freshmen in 1965. Last year it admitted about 2024 undergraduate freshmen. Assuming (a simplistic assumption, I admit) a linear increase, the average undergraduate freshmen enrollment is 1834. So in the last 54 years, there were a total of 54 x 1834 = 99036 undergraduate freshmen enrollment.
So, considering this total number of about 99000 undergraduate freshmen enrollment, I get the feeling that admission to Harvard College freshman class is not that big of a deal. I used to think It was such a huge deal before I did this back of the envelop calculation. I just wanted to share. I totally get where the oP is coming from. OP, you aren't alone. I feel the same way you do. But in my case, the feeling is about getting into Harvard College.
When I went to Harvard for college many years ago, my (inward) reaction to “wow, you go to Harvard!” quickly became “Yeah, me and 20K other people.” Lots of whom weren’t any smarter than the kids who were my friends in HS.
There were 20k people attending Harvard College?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can be snotty in the land of good schools, where every kid has access to a full compliment of APs and decent enough teachers so that they can pass all their APs.
Then their is my high school in the rural South. It offers two APs— to seniors only. AB Calc and English Lit. I was the only one to pass either my senior year— with a DMV sneering 3 on the AB Calc that was the first pass in my HS in 5 years.
For kids with crappy teachers in crappy public schools with only a few APs— which is most public high schools, passing an AP means something. Passing 3 or more is rare and an actual accomplishment. No reason to snark on places that don’t prepare kids for TJ and Blair and MIT and Harvard. Put your kids certificate aside and move on.
Uh, it’s “complement” and “there.”
Exactly. Crappy public education. And just not a great proofreader.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can be snotty in the land of good schools, where every kid has access to a full compliment of APs and decent enough teachers so that they can pass all their APs.
Then their is my high school in the rural South. It offers two APs— to seniors only. AB Calc and English Lit. I was the only one to pass either my senior year— with a DMV sneering 3 on the AB Calc that was the first pass in my HS in 5 years.
For kids with crappy teachers in crappy public schools with only a few APs— which is most public high schools, passing an AP means something. Passing 3 or more is rare and an actual accomplishment. No reason to snark on places that don’t prepare kids for TJ and Blair and MIT and Harvard. Put your kids certificate aside and move on.
Uh, it’s “complement” and “there.”
Anonymous wrote:You can be snotty in the land of good schools, where every kid has access to a full compliment of APs and decent enough teachers so that they can pass all their APs.
Then their is my high school in the rural South. It offers two APs— to seniors only. AB Calc and English Lit. I was the only one to pass either my senior year— with a DMV sneering 3 on the AB Calc that was the first pass in my HS in 5 years.
For kids with crappy teachers in crappy public schools with only a few APs— which is most public high schools, passing an AP means something. Passing 3 or more is rare and an actual accomplishment. No reason to snark on places that don’t prepare kids for TJ and Blair and MIT and Harvard. Put your kids certificate aside and move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harvard University admitted about 1650 undergraduate freshmen in 1965. Last year it admitted about 2024 undergraduate freshmen. Assuming (a simplistic assumption, I admit) a linear increase, the average undergraduate freshmen enrollment is 1834. So in the last 54 years, there were a total of 54 x 1834 = 99036 undergraduate freshmen enrollment.
So, considering this total number of about 99000 undergraduate freshmen enrollment, I get the feeling that admission to Harvard College freshman class is not that big of a deal. I used to think It was such a huge deal before I did this back of the envelop calculation. I just wanted to share. I totally get where the oP is coming from. OP, you aren't alone. I feel the same way you do. But in my case, the feeling is about getting into Harvard College.
When I went to Harvard for college many years ago, my (inward) reaction to “wow, you go to Harvard!” quickly became “Yeah, me and 20K other people.” Lots of whom weren’t any smarter than the kids who were my friends in HS.
Anonymous wrote:You can be snotty in the land of good schools, where every kid has access to a full compliment of APs and decent enough teachers so that they can pass all their APs.
Then their is my high school in the rural South. It offers two APs— to seniors only. AB Calc and English Lit. I was the only one to pass either my senior year— with a DMV sneering 3 on the AB Calc that was the first pass in my HS in 5 years.
For kids with crappy teachers in crappy public schools with only a few APs— which is most public high schools, passing an AP means something. Passing 3 or more is rare and an actual accomplishment. No reason to snark on places that don’t prepare kids for TJ and Blair and MIT and Harvard. Put your kids certificate aside and move on.
Anonymous wrote:My DC was a National AP scholar. He got the same postcard size certificate as for the AP Scholar with Distinction. Neither made any difference in college admissions or life.