Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges really want you to take AP classes if they're offered at your school and get good grades in them. And it certainly doesn't hurt if you also do really well on the AP exams themselves and let colleges know your scores.
The overwhelming majority of colleges will tell you, though, the scores themselves have little or no impact on college admissions. And how could they, anyway? Most students will have taken half or more of their AP classes in the senior year, and won't have scores on any of those exams until well after they've already been admitted to college.
No true. Colleges want you to take the highest level courses you're capable of being successful in (A or B grade usually), and would wonder why you're taking AP classes if you're getting a C or below a 3 on the exam. And in some high schools, the most advanced kids have already taken 5-10 AP classes by the end of 11th grade. Colleges will absolutely be interested in how well students do on those exams.
What's your source?
15 years of college counseling in a high school with many very high-achieving students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Colleges really want you to take AP classes if they're offered at your school and get good grades in them. And it certainly doesn't hurt if you also do really well on the AP exams themselves and let colleges know your scores.
The overwhelming majority of colleges will tell you, though, the scores themselves have little or no impact on college admissions. And how could they, anyway? Most students will have taken half or more of their AP classes in the senior year, and won't have scores on any of those exams until well after they've already been admitted to college.
No true. Colleges want you to take the highest level courses you're capable of being successful in (A or B grade usually), and would wonder why you're taking AP classes if you're getting a C or below a 3 on the exam. And in some high schools, the most advanced kids have already taken 5-10 AP classes by the end of 11th grade. Colleges will absolutely be interested in how well students do on those exams.
What's your source?
Anonymous wrote:None of those indicates extra emphasis on AP scores in light of test optional approach
Anonymous wrote:NYU considers under a wierd chose your own adventure in test scores program:
https://www.nyu.edu/admissions/undergraduate-admissions/how-to-apply/standardized-tests.html
Princeton recommends submitting all AP scores
https://admission.princeton.edu/how-apply/standardized-testing
For Boston College, AP scores “further quantify academic success”
https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/admission/apply/test-optional.html
AP scores now have greater weight:
https://ectutoring.com/how-covid-affects-the-sat-and-act
Enough cites, or do you need more (Google is your friend)
Anonymous wrote:Our DS did not report the individual scores on the application, but did indicate which AP Scholar level attained to date. Will pay to report the actual score if he choses a school that gives credit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is applying this year. She had more than one college say that in the age of test optional, they are looking more at APs because they provide objective standards. So submit strong scores (“scores that you believe reflect your achievement,” so something similar)
Of course, you don’t have to turn in AP Scores either. But an unhooked UMC kid with a high GPA and a bunch of APs, and no SAT/ACT or AP scores may have problems.
Name the schools, please. There's simply no reason to hide their names in anonymity. You wouldn't be outing yourself in any way, shape or form.
It is just so unhelpful for posters to say stuff like this without backing it up.
Agree. My DS applied to schools this year and we never heard this. Attended a lot of info sessions. I reviewed his common app and didn’t even see a place to enter scores (unlike SAT and ACT).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is applying this year. She had more than one college say that in the age of test optional, they are looking more at APs because they provide objective standards. So submit strong scores (“scores that you believe reflect your achievement,” so something similar)
Of course, you don’t have to turn in AP Scores either. But an unhooked UMC kid with a high GPA and a bunch of APs, and no SAT/ACT or AP scores may have problems.
Name the schools, please. There's simply no reason to hide their names in anonymity. You wouldn't be outing yourself in any way, shape or form.
It is just so unhelpful for posters to say stuff like this without backing it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is applying this year. She had more than one college say that in the age of test optional, they are looking more at APs because they provide objective standards. So submit strong scores (“scores that you believe reflect your achievement,” so something similar)
Of course, you don’t have to turn in AP Scores either. But an unhooked UMC kid with a high GPA and a bunch of APs, and no SAT/ACT or AP scores may have problems.
Name the schools, please. There's simply no reason to hide their names in anonymity. You wouldn't be outing yourself in any way, shape or form.
It is just so unhelpful for posters to say stuff like this without backing it up.
This is unnecessarily aggressive. I found the post helpful. I’d welcome the names of the school but the takeaway is still there. And I think it’s a point you’ll be hearing a lot more this year from more schools, though they may be reluctant to say it.
How is the takeaway there, exactly? Why is it so difficult to name the school on an anonymous forum? It's so interesting: on this thread we have posters who refuse to believe what colleges actually put on their websites about AP exams schools, yet when an anonymous poster says anonymous colleges are saying something different "the takeaway is still there." What is this, a QAnon thread? If you're going to offer as fact something that doesn't square with what's being publicly said, just back it up already. It's not that difficult.