Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ahhhh! Please stop posting misleading information. Physics is not a prerequisite for admission to William and Mary.
Colleges tell you how many courses they prefer for you to have had in specific disciplines. Some majors will have prerequisites. Your kid will not be denied admission because s/he has not had physics.
No one is saying it's a prerequisite. But if you vary from their recommended course list it is a disadvantage. One might have other stellar qualities that make up for it, but one might be on the edge.
Off of W&M own admission page:
"Our most competitive applicants have taken a rigorous course load including courses such as Calculus, Physics and 4 years of a single foreign language. You can increase your competitiveness by taking the highest level courses offered at your school and performing well in them."
They explicitly mention calculus, physics and 4 years of a single foreign language in a one paragraph description of their view of a competitive candidate-- which is pretty telling. Those are typically the courses that parents call schools and ask--does he/she really need to take calc, physics or 4 years of FL. And their answer is if they want to be competitive, yes.
Our most competitive means the top 5%. Note the words "such as" suggesting that they are aware not all high schools offer all classes.
My favorite college visit was at MIT where the tour guide was rattling off information about the work being done in the engineering programs and laboratories around campus. One parent asked her about her own research at which point the student disclosed she was a Literature and Humanities major and had no interest in science. I could have hugged her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ahhhh! Please stop posting misleading information. Physics is not a prerequisite for admission to William and Mary.
Colleges tell you how many courses they prefer for you to have had in specific disciplines. Some majors will have prerequisites. Your kid will not be denied admission because s/he has not had physics.
No one is saying it's a prerequisite. But if you vary from their recommended course list it is a disadvantage. One might have other stellar qualities that make up for it, but one might be on the edge.
Off of W&M own admission page:
"Our most competitive applicants have taken a rigorous course load including courses such as Calculus, Physics and 4 years of a single foreign language. You can increase your competitiveness by taking the highest level courses offered at your school and performing well in them."
They explicitly mention calculus, physics and 4 years of a single foreign language in a one paragraph description of their view of a competitive candidate-- which is pretty telling. Those are typically the courses that parents call schools and ask--does he/she really need to take calc, physics or 4 years of FL. And their answer is if they want to be competitive, yes.
Anonymous wrote:Ahhhh! Please stop posting misleading information. Physics is not a prerequisite for admission to William and Mary.
Colleges tell you how many courses they prefer for you to have had in specific disciplines. Some majors will have prerequisites. Your kid will not be denied admission because s/he has not had physics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless she is applying to top 25, three is usually fine especially since it’s the three cores (and having AP CS doesn’t hurt for sure).
This wasn't our experience--when asked reps from top 50 SLACs consistently encouraged DD to take 4 years of science even though she had an interest in international relations. They wouldn't say she HAD to do it, but when pressed they said the 4th year of science looked better than the other things she was considering (which were high level courses). BTW she was strongly advised NOT to do an abbreviated schedule senior year. Said it often raised questions/concerns.
Anonymous wrote:Unless she is applying to top 25, three is usually fine especially since it’s the three cores (and having AP CS doesn’t hurt for sure).
Anonymous wrote:You don't really describe how selective of a college your daughter is thinking about.
At the tippy top schools, the idea of an abbreviated schedule itself is going to be scrutinized. Even at state flagships, three classes is going to be questioned. English, math, and 2 APs sounds like 4 anyway.
I don't mean that the abbreviated schedule (even 3 classes) is a problem, I mean that the internship or college course(s) it is allowing needs to be better than what she would get in HS.
If the internship is good enough, they won't care about science. But it sounds like there is no internship yet which means it is unlikely to be good enough to take care of all flaws in the application.
Now a college course(s), I'm guessing it will be like the two AP social studies classes. I think math, AP English, 2 AP SS and a college course would be fine if it doesn't lead to dropping most HS based ECs, without replacing them.