Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My advice would be to never do anything just for the sake of college admissions. And especially not starting to think about this in 7th grade.
My kid is CS major at UMD now and went through the SMCS magnet in MCPS. I think taking the most rigorous STEM classes, good SAT/ACT, AP scores are likely he most important things for admissions.
The advice you get depends on the student. There is an industry of college consultants (and their clients) with whom you will be competing. 7th grade is not too early to think about college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For UMD CS, just doing the basic is enough
Good grade and test score, take AP CS, calc BC
Nothing over the top needed.
DD was offered merit (5k every year + honors college) with just the above
Is this true? So UMD CS is easy to get in so long as you took Calc BC and took an AP CS class?
Anonymous wrote:For UMD CS, just doing the basic is enough
Good grade and test score, take AP CS, calc BC
Nothing over the top needed.
DD was offered merit (5k every year + honors college) with just the above
Anonymous wrote:For UMD CS, just doing the basic is enough
Good grade and test score, take AP CS, calc BC
Nothing over the top needed.
DD was offered merit (5k every year + honors college) with just the above
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My advice would be to never do anything just for the sake of college admissions. And especially not starting to think about this in 7th grade.
My kid is CS major at UMD now and went through the SMCS magnet in MCPS. I think taking the most rigorous STEM classes, good SAT/ACT, AP scores are likely he most important things for admissions.
The advice you get depends on the student. There is an industry of college consultants (and their clients) with whom you will be competing. 7th grade is not too early to think about college.
Anonymous wrote:The problem with getting into UMD CS is that it recently capped the number of CS students to something like 600 freshmen. It also is incredibly hard to transfer into the program from another major. So it's relatively easy to get into UMD, but exceedingly difficult to major in CS.
Anonymous wrote:My advice would be to never do anything just for the sake of college admissions. And especially not starting to think about this in 7th grade.
My kid is CS major at UMD now and went through the SMCS magnet in MCPS. I think taking the most rigorous STEM classes, good SAT/ACT, AP scores are likely he most important things for admissions.
Anonymous wrote:#1 tip for UMD is don't blindly chase CS direct admit. UMD has dozens of majors
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Calc BC by sophomore year. Multi, linear equations and diff equations by senior year. Also, don't wait for AP Stats but start now at your community college with the goal that you complete the Data Science courses offered.
Take intro to coding at your local community college ASAP, something like Intro to Python, Prgramming Fundamentals, etc.
By senior year, complete the community college's CS sequence. That's why it's important to have Calc BC by sophomore year so that you can take upper level courses like optimisation algorithms, etc.
Get a 1530+ on SAT with 780+ on Math portion.
Do this and you have an okay shot at gaining acceptance.
How does the Math path work from MS to get to Calc BC in sophomore year?
DP.. here's what my kid did:
H Alg 7th
H Geom 8th
H Alg2/Trig 9th
IB Precalc 10th
AP BC Calc 11th
MVC 12th
The AP BC Calc is in Junior year, not Sophomore?
What choice do we have if our MS doesn't offer Honors Algebra?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the title says.
My kid is interested in CS and is in MS now.
What should my kid be doing starting 7th grade to be considered for admissions into UMD CP? Tutoring on the side? Extra curriculars? I'm looking for guidance from people whose kids got admitted.
-Be on highest math and science track
-Take CS APs in high school and score 5s
-Do well on SAT (1500+)
-Do coding competitions (lots online)
-Participate in CS/STEM summer programs (some you may have to pay for, but there are quite a few free ones)
-Join a VEX robotics team and compete
-Join high school robotics team
My kid didn't do any CS/STEM summer programs or extra curriculars. No tutor. Only prep was SAT and AP at home practice tests.
But, they were a magnet student with super high stats, with a lot of AP/IB STEM classes, including IB Java and took MVC in HS.
I don't think UMD cares *that* much about activities. They care about rigor and stats.