Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are most of the APs taken as Juniors and Seniors? My child is a sophomore in a humanities focused test-in program in MCPS. He is taking one AP as a sophomore and the rest of his classes are honors. The school/program doesn’t really allow more than that. Next year he definitely has to take at least two APs as part of his program but it will be the first opportunity to take any additional ones (possibly Bio and Calc). 4 APs seems like so much/too much. But is that the only way to take a rigorous enough schedule? He is aiming for a selective liberal arts college.
No they start in 9th grade with AP world history.
Some MCPS allow kids to start APs in 9th. Others don’t. All that matters for this question is what the norm is for your student’s school and how they compare to that norm.
Not in my child's school/program. There are no APs until 10th (and then just one) and then two or more starting in 11th.
What school is this?
Your kid will be at a disadvantage to other students in the same area if they are taking APs starting in 9th grade.
It's not true that you're just competing against students in your school. You're really competing with students in your greater area.
Unless you're at a Magnet school. Then you are competing with the other kids in your school (who are considered the best of the best).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are most of the APs taken as Juniors and Seniors? My child is a sophomore in a humanities focused test-in program in MCPS. He is taking one AP as a sophomore and the rest of his classes are honors. The school/program doesn’t really allow more than that. Next year he definitely has to take at least two APs as part of his program but it will be the first opportunity to take any additional ones (possibly Bio and Calc). 4 APs seems like so much/too much. But is that the only way to take a rigorous enough schedule? He is aiming for a selective liberal arts college.
No they start in 9th grade with AP world history.
Some MCPS allow kids to start APs in 9th. Others don’t. All that matters for this question is what the norm is for your student’s school and how they compare to that norm.
Not in my child's school/program. There are no APs until 10th (and then just one) and then two or more starting in 11th.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are most of the APs taken as Juniors and Seniors? My child is a sophomore in a humanities focused test-in program in MCPS. He is taking one AP as a sophomore and the rest of his classes are honors. The school/program doesn’t really allow more than that. Next year he definitely has to take at least two APs as part of his program but it will be the first opportunity to take any additional ones (possibly Bio and Calc). 4 APs seems like so much/too much. But is that the only way to take a rigorous enough schedule? He is aiming for a selective liberal arts college.
No they start in 9th grade with AP world history.
Some MCPS allow kids to start APs in 9th. Others don’t. All that matters for this question is what the norm is for your student’s school and how they compare to that norm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are most of the APs taken as Juniors and Seniors? My child is a sophomore in a humanities focused test-in program in MCPS. He is taking one AP as a sophomore and the rest of his classes are honors. The school/program doesn’t really allow more than that. Next year he definitely has to take at least two APs as part of his program but it will be the first opportunity to take any additional ones (possibly Bio and Calc). 4 APs seems like so much/too much. But is that the only way to take a rigorous enough schedule? He is aiming for a selective liberal arts college.
No they start in 9th grade with AP world history.
Anonymous wrote:Are most of the APs taken as Juniors and Seniors? My child is a sophomore in a humanities focused test-in program in MCPS. He is taking one AP as a sophomore and the rest of his classes are honors. The school/program doesn’t really allow more than that. Next year he definitely has to take at least two APs as part of his program but it will be the first opportunity to take any additional ones (possibly Bio and Calc). 4 APs seems like so much/too much. But is that the only way to take a rigorous enough schedule? He is aiming for a selective liberal arts college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At the same time there isn’t much point in taking more than 7-8 APs if it comes at the expense of meaningful commitment to something outside of school.
The varied answers here tell the story - which is it varies by high school. And no counselor will give you his or her formula.
This is the thing though. People say this but that doesn't mean anything for MOST kids. MOST kids are not nationally ranked athletes or musicians or starting successful businesses at 17. That's what college counselors mean when they say stuff like that. They want something spectacular on your resume (in addition to the 4.0 GPA and perfect SATs). But most adults are not even capable of spectacular, let alone teenagers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It means AP Physics C not 1 or 2
It means Calculus BC not AB
It means AP Chem and/or AP Bio not AP Psych or AP Environmental Science
It means both AP Lit and AP Language
It means AP Histories for 3+ years
It means AP Foreign Language
AP Stats is a nice add on but not in lieu of BC Calc
The amount of pressure and stress a child would be under completing this kind of workload, at 14-17 years old, is horrible. I am disturbed that parents are allowing the colleges to demand this kind of load on someone who is not actually at the age of a college level class. We are not buying into this and if our DDs go to a lower ranked college because they only completed 5 APs and all honors, and 2 of those honors were AP Psych and AP Environmental Science, then so be it. They’ll still have a college degree and in most fields, thar’s what matters. We are not demanding more of them unless they ask for those other classes.
Anonymous wrote:At the same time there isn’t much point in taking more than 7-8 APs if it comes at the expense of meaningful commitment to something outside of school.
The varied answers here tell the story - which is it varies by high school. And no counselor will give you his or her formula.
Anonymous wrote:Dd's school offers 27 AP classes and 12 honors classes. She took 5 AP classes and 7 honors classes. What does most rigorous really mean? If you compare her to some peers with 9 or 12 APs, she did not take the "most rigorous."
Anonymous wrote:It means AP Physics C not 1 or 2
It means Calculus BC not AB
It means AP Chem and/or AP Bio not AP Psych or AP Environmental Science
It means both AP Lit and AP Language
It means AP Histories for 3+ years
It means AP Foreign Language
AP Stats is a nice add on but not in lieu of BC Calc