Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son's school doesn't offer AP and many of the top privates (and some publics) are discontinuing their offering. In his school's case, over 40% of graduates end up in Top 25 colleges. Try to take challenging courses (whatever that means in your case), and don't get as caught up on AP count.
Which school? I'm assuming it is public?
Private. We live in California now though, and I can’t speak to AP trends in DMV.
Then why answer OP’s question? You have no experience to offer.
Anonymous wrote:10-15, more if possible. It’s super competitive out there. My DD had 16 and was rejected at many schools in the range of 20%-40%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son's school doesn't offer AP and many of the top privates (and some publics) are discontinuing their offering. In his school's case, over 40% of graduates end up in Top 25 colleges. Try to take challenging courses (whatever that means in your case), and don't get as caught up on AP count.
Which school? I'm assuming it is public?
Private. We live in California now though, and I can’t speak to AP trends in DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son's school doesn't offer AP and many of the top privates (and some publics) are discontinuing their offering. In his school's case, over 40% of graduates end up in Top 25 colleges. Try to take challenging courses (whatever that means in your case), and don't get as caught up on AP count.
Which school? I'm assuming it is public?
Anonymous wrote:Rising 11th grader.
Anonymous wrote:As many as DC can handle and still get good grades. Goal is to have most rigorous box checked by school counselor. Also want to have GPA near the top of class. Even if school doesn’t rank colleges see where your kid falls on a percentile basis at their HS.
So, most likely 8+ if school offers a decent amount of APs.
Anonymous wrote:10-15, more if possible. It’s super competitive out there. My DD had 16 and was rejected at many schools in the range of 20%-40%.
Anonymous wrote:10-15, more if possible. It’s super competitive out there. My DD had 16 and was rejected at many schools in the range of 20%-40%.
Anonymous wrote:10-15, more if possible. It’s super competitive out there. My DD had 16 and was rejected at many schools in the range of 20%-40%.
Anonymous wrote:Our son's school doesn't offer AP and many of the top privates (and some publics) are discontinuing their offering. In his school's case, over 40% of graduates end up in Top 25 colleges. Try to take challenging courses (whatever that means in your case), and don't get as caught up on AP count.