Anonymous wrote:I graduated from high school 18 years ago, so I am not sure how all of this has changed. I attending an IB program in Florida and we didn't have a non-complete program. You either did the full program or not. I started freshman year in "pre-IB" and it was a lottery to get a seat of the 100 available. They called them magnet schools back then, which made no sense since my program was in north county in a wealthy area. The other one was at St. Pete High, which was a dump.
Anyways, we ended up taking both the IB and the AP exams, since the state of Florida paid money to performing schools at the time based on AP exam results. I found the AP exams to be a joke, and since I was angry I had to take them, I answered one half in Spanish (not a native language of mine) and the other one I wrote about how my biology teacher was bald. I am pretty sure I got 3s on both of those.
I pursued engineering in both undergrad and graduate school. Eventually gave up on engineering and went to law school. I have always felt the IB program was the best fit for any talented student. That said, Florida was unique in that the "pool" of kids was very different compared to here I suspect, and even though my local high school had AP classes, the "level" of student was likely not the same. If I didn't go to IB, my parents would have sent me to Tampa Jesuit, and they didn't have girls, so I deftly avoided that.
Anonymous wrote:Bottom line: School Board keeps claiming we are in a budget crisis and don't have enough money. AP and IB target the same kids and most prefer AP. Both are not sustainable in a school unless it is an extremely large school with high SES.
Get rid of IB. AP is cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:The best public schools in NoVa are all AP. End of story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best public schools in NoVa are all AP. End of story.
Your ignorance amazes me. I'm speechless.
Anonymous wrote:The best public schools in NoVa are all AP. End of story.
Anonymous wrote:My kids have gone through both IB and AP FCPS schools, and I can tell you that both will provide excellent prep for college, which is the bottom line. All of mine that have graduated have gotten into their first choice school.
One of my DC who did the IB diploma is a STEM student at a HYPS school and found her HS prep better than many of her peers.
I have no problem with AP. Fine program. My kid who did AP has done very well in college. But, this "more flexibility" in AP canard is false. Like your kids, by the time they fill up graduation requirements there is not that much space left for electives, and the problem is not too few choices, but too many.
Do not conflate IB with the IB diploma (meant to challenge the top students). The vast majority of kids at IB schools do not do the full diploma...they treat it like AP and take IB classes individually. If they take a certain number they get an IB Certificate. I had one kid who did not do the IB diploma because DC hated English and did not want to take the tough IB version...DC loaded up in STEM courses instead.
We can certainly argue that IB may be inappropriate for some of the schools in which it's been placed (I agree with that). That is a worthwhile discussion. Placing a few IB schools throughout the county so that each student has the option to do IB seems sensible. But the posters here who feel they need to prove that IB is horrible and inferior are wrong. It is a fine program, well respected by colleges, for those who want it. Honestly, whether AP or IB, you are learning essentially the same material and will be well prepared for college.
Anonymous wrote:
Excellent - thanks for providing the context. It's interesting how an anonymous forum can generate such extremes of good and terrible information/opinion... I really wonder if Langley would reject IB if they were sure it would not open the gates to pupil placement. As it is Langley and McLean students pupil place to Marshall to take IB - so there is some demand. Of course, any single program is not for everyone and anyone considering these decisions must do some real work to understand the pros & cons.