Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a highly selective school 35 years ago and even then most of my AP credits weren't accepted. Why would it be different now?
When Cal stopped accepting AP credits, even 5s, almost every selective public school followed. This was almost 20 years ago and was basically a shift over 2 years- I just remember it because my college counselor talked about it a lot.
Privates I applied to made it clear they didn’t accept AP credit as credit towards graduation but you could skip the prerequisites from some classes (like you could only take Math 55 if you got a 5 on BC). I don’t know when that started and if there was a leader, it was just long before I applied to schools.
WTF are you talking about? Cal accepts tons of AP credits.
https://ced.berkeley.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Advanced-Placement-Exam-Credit-11-23.pdf
Every college except for 8 colleges award actual college credit for AP scores. MIT, Yale, Princeton, Stanford...thousands of others...award actual credit, though schools like Yale only take STEM and language AP scores and you need to score a 5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a highly selective school 35 years ago and even then most of my AP credits weren't accepted. Why would it be different now?
When Cal stopped accepting AP credits, even 5s, almost every selective public school followed. This was almost 20 years ago and was basically a shift over 2 years- I just remember it because my college counselor talked about it a lot.
Privates I applied to made it clear they didn’t accept AP credit as credit towards graduation but you could skip the prerequisites from some classes (like you could only take Math 55 if you got a 5 on BC). I don’t know when that started and if there was a leader, it was just long before I applied to schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a highly selective school 35 years ago and even then most of my AP credits weren't accepted. Why would it be different now?
When Cal stopped accepting AP credits, even 5s, almost every selective public school followed. This was almost 20 years ago and was basically a shift over 2 years- I just remember it because my college counselor talked about it a lot.
Privates I applied to made it clear they didn’t accept AP credit as credit towards graduation but you could skip the prerequisites from some classes (like you could only take Math 55 if you got a 5 on BC). I don’t know when that started and if there was a leader, it was just long before I applied to schools.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a highly selective school 35 years ago and even then most of my AP credits weren't accepted. Why would it be different now?
Anonymous wrote:The reality is that college credit for HS work is no longer given at most highly competitive colleges, no matter how applicants may have scored on IB or AP exams. A student may be able to place out of intro level college classes, but that's about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, can't we be happy for a school that doubled its' pass rate from one year to the next?
Yay! A DCPS school's test scores improve markedly.
Positive thing, no?
Uh...half of the school can't even get a 3 on a single AP test.
They did better than all but four other high schools in DCPS. Banneker's pass rate was 57%. McArthur's pass rate was 45%. They are very much in the mix. Let's see how last year's kids did, but the growth trajectory is a good thing.
I’ll throw in DCI pass rates is high 60% think it was 66 or 68% and the school does not self select at all unlike McKinley or Banneker.
Clarification because DCI is IB and not AP. 68% of kids got college credit with their IB exam scores. Not sure if that is equivalent to an AP score of 3 and up or 4 and up.
FYI, IB exams are typically more difficult than AP exams. Some schools might give credit for 5 but it is usually 6 or 7 out of scale of 7.
So more difficult exams and more difficult point system to get college credits.
Above is a generalization but true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, can't we be happy for a school that doubled its' pass rate from one year to the next?
Yay! A DCPS school's test scores improve markedly.
Positive thing, no?
Uh...half of the school can't even get a 3 on a single AP test.
They did better than all but four other high schools in DCPS. Banneker's pass rate was 57%. McArthur's pass rate was 45%. They are very much in the mix. Let's see how last year's kids did, but the growth trajectory is a good thing.
I’ll throw in DCI pass rates is high 60% think it was 66 or 68% and the school does not self select at all unlike McKinley or Banneker.
Clarification because DCI is IB and not AP. 68% of kids got college credit with their IB exam scores. Not sure if that is equivalent to an AP score of 3 and up or 4 and up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, can't we be happy for a school that doubled its' pass rate from one year to the next?
Yay! A DCPS school's test scores improve markedly.
Positive thing, no?
Uh...half of the school can't even get a 3 on a single AP test.
They did better than all but four other high schools in DCPS. Banneker's pass rate was 57%. McArthur's pass rate was 45%. They are very much in the mix. Let's see how last year's kids did, but the growth trajectory is a good thing.
I’ll throw in DCI pass rates is high 60% think it was 66 or 68% and the school does not self select at all unlike McKinley or Banneker.
BASIS is 100% and they don’t self-select.