Anonymous wrote:I doubt PP is a college admissions person. From
looking at Naviance colleges first and foremost want
As and then rigor. I noticed for example the kids who got into Harvard from my kids school had higher UW GPA’s but lower weighted than my daughter. She didn’t apply to Harvard- it was just an interesting observation. I also agree that the number of APs depends on what you take. My daughter is taking 7 and it’s doable but hers are generally the easier ones. Econ Cal AB Environmental Science Human Geography etc.
Anonymous wrote:My kid didn't take any AP courses. Zero. He took a few honors over 4 years. He graduated from college a year ago and got a job starting at $110K. Stop stressing over this.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t over do the APs. The golden rule is to take the most rigorous classes that you could do well in. No point of getting all Bs in 6 APs. Some schools will take the AP weight off and only see the Bs. Be choosy and focus on APs in his major interest and leave the rest. DS ended up a 5 APs total but honor/advanced classes in others where AP isn’t offered. He is ending his high school career w strong GPAs, AP scores, internships, a sport, music and only a handful of late nights (past midnight) and a sane mind. His admission road this year has been very successful. His biggest stressor now, aside from prepping for AP physic C exams, is deciding which college to enroll in.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter took 1 freshman year 1 sophomore 2 junior year and a ton senior year and did well with college admissions this year.
What AP can you take in freshmen year
AP CS Principles or an AP History are common.
Anonymous wrote:My kid didn't take any AP courses. Zero. He took a few honors over 4 years. He graduated from college a year ago and got a job starting at $110K. Stop stressing over this.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think there are differences between Honors and AP personally unless you are taking the AP exam (which my DC did not because it would not help with the college of choice):
DC took 4 honors (zero AP classes) for 9th grade -- 4 total
Then 3 Honors (plus 2 AP) for 10th grade -- 5 total
Then 5 AP for (zero honors) 11th grade -- 5 total
Then 4 AP for 12th grade -- 4 total
Why Honors/AP? Mostly because DC had to take those classes anyway (English, Science, History, Math). Then, the electives were because DC wanted them (Psych, Comp Sci, Stat) and there wasn't a non-AP option.
Anonymous wrote:High school administrator: don’t. Take time to enjoy being a kid.