Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WL IB does not accept anyone that wants to take it. You have to be accepted into the program. Quite a large percentage of students in 11/12 take partial IB. They take IB in 4 or so classes and then take AP classes or Dual Enrollment classes to fill out their schedule. Not to burst your bubble, but an all A student at W-L is quite common.
If you are in zone for W-L, you can enroll in the IB diploma program by right. DC is a senior in the program now. It is crazy crazy intense, but the college admission bump is out of this world. Not sure it was worth it in retrospect, but DC has gotten incredible college admissions results so far.
Not exactly. You don't have to apply for "Pre IB" in 9th-10th but do have to meet the pre-reqs to be in the diploma program even if it's your home school
Prerequisites for the IB Diploma Program
Algebra II (preferably intensified) or greater in 10th grade. Less than Intensified Algebra II will greatly limit potential IB Diploma Program scheduling options.
Spanish, French, Arabic, Chinese or Latin IV in 10th grade
A’s and B’s in all subjects (7th-10th grade)
Interesting. I see this on W-L's IB page. Not that many FCPS students complete a fourth year of a foreign language by 10th grade, and the IB schools there don't suggest it is a pre-requisite. W-L seems to like promoting its IB diploma program as a "school within a school."
My bad—PP is right about prerequisites. But if you do the courses and get the grades, it’s yours. DS says it doesn’t really feel like a school within a school. Lots of non-IB students take IB courses here and there. The workload for the full IB program is incredibly intense. It’s a different thing than 6-7 AP courses a year. DS glad he’s done it, but he doesn’t look back with fondness. If we had to do it over again, I might push him not to do it.
The IB diploma program isn’t more demanding than 6-7 AP courses a year. In fact, if you load up on SL courses it’s probably less demanding. For that reason, most AP schools discourage kids from taking 6-7 AP courses in a single year to avoid burnout. You are starting to sound ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All good points above. I’ll just add that the IB teachers at W-L are among the best teachers around. DC graduating this year from full IB program. Every single teacher has been a standout. Complete professionals, very bright and engaging. It’s a difficult program, but the teachers make it worthwhile.
The anthropology teacher is a perennial favorite. The English teacher Krauth is great. Zarro for math. There wasn’t a bad one.
+1 on Anthro and Krauth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All good points above. I’ll just add that the IB teachers at W-L are among the best teachers around. DC graduating this year from full IB program. Every single teacher has been a standout. Complete professionals, very bright and engaging. It’s a difficult program, but the teachers make it worthwhile.
The anthropology teacher is a perennial favorite. The English teacher Krauth is great. Zarro for math. There wasn’t a bad one.
That’s awesome that IB teachers are top notch, but they don’t get into IB until 11th grade. And the last semester of 12th is always a coast. So you are talking about 3 semesters of “the good stuff”?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WL IB does not accept anyone that wants to take it. You have to be accepted into the program. Quite a large percentage of students in 11/12 take partial IB. They take IB in 4 or so classes and then take AP classes or Dual Enrollment classes to fill out their schedule. Not to burst your bubble, but an all A student at W-L is quite common.
If you are in zone for W-L, you can enroll in the IB diploma program by right. DC is a senior in the program now. It is crazy crazy intense, but the college admission bump is out of this world. Not sure it was worth it in retrospect, but DC has gotten incredible college admissions results so far.
Congratulations to your DC. McLean also has very good college admissions for a NoVa public.
Full-pay is king
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All good points above. I’ll just add that the IB teachers at W-L are among the best teachers around. DC graduating this year from full IB program. Every single teacher has been a standout. Complete professionals, very bright and engaging. It’s a difficult program, but the teachers make it worthwhile.
The anthropology teacher is a perennial favorite. The English teacher Krauth is great. Zarro for math. There wasn’t a bad one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All good points above. I’ll just add that the IB teachers at W-L are among the best teachers around. DC graduating this year from full IB program. Every single teacher has been a standout. Complete professionals, very bright and engaging. It’s a difficult program, but the teachers make it worthwhile.
The anthropology teacher is a perennial favorite. The English teacher Krauth is great. Zarro for math. There wasn’t a bad one.
Anonymous wrote:All good points above. I’ll just add that the IB teachers at W-L are among the best teachers around. DC graduating this year from full IB program. Every single teacher has been a standout. Complete professionals, very bright and engaging. It’s a difficult program, but the teachers make it worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only about 100 IB grads at W-L each year who do the full program. W-L has both IB and AP. It’s a bigger and more diverse school and certainly well regarded. It’s more of an urban school where Mclean is very suburban and has a larger attendance zone too. W-L has a more down to earth atmosphere because of the population.
What does "down to earth" mean? Do the IB classes operate like a school within a school, where the more motivated IB students have mostly classes together?
Code for more poor people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WL IB does not accept anyone that wants to take it. You have to be accepted into the program. Quite a large percentage of students in 11/12 take partial IB. They take IB in 4 or so classes and then take AP classes or Dual Enrollment classes to fill out their schedule. Not to burst your bubble, but an all A student at W-L is quite common.
If you are in zone for W-L, you can enroll in the IB diploma program by right. DC is a senior in the program now. It is crazy crazy intense, but the college admission bump is out of this world. Not sure it was worth it in retrospect, but DC has gotten incredible college admissions results so far.
Congratulations to your DC. McLean also has very good college admissions for a NoVa public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WL IB does not accept anyone that wants to take it. You have to be accepted into the program. Quite a large percentage of students in 11/12 take partial IB. They take IB in 4 or so classes and then take AP classes or Dual Enrollment classes to fill out their schedule. Not to burst your bubble, but an all A student at W-L is quite common.
If you are in zone for W-L, you can enroll in the IB diploma program by right. DC is a senior in the program now. It is crazy crazy intense, but the college admission bump is out of this world. Not sure it was worth it in retrospect, but DC has gotten incredible college admissions results so far.
Not exactly. You don't have to apply for "Pre IB" in 9th-10th but do have to meet the pre-reqs to be in the diploma program even if it's your home school
Prerequisites for the IB Diploma Program
Algebra II (preferably intensified) or greater in 10th grade. Less than Intensified Algebra II will greatly limit potential IB Diploma Program scheduling options.
Spanish, French, Arabic, Chinese or Latin IV in 10th grade
A’s and B’s in all subjects (7th-10th grade)
Interesting. I see this on W-L's IB page. Not that many FCPS students complete a fourth year of a foreign language by 10th grade, and the IB schools there don't suggest it is a pre-requisite. W-L seems to like promoting its IB diploma program as a "school within a school."
My bad—PP is right about prerequisites. But if you do the courses and get the grades, it’s yours. DS says it doesn’t really feel like a school within a school. Lots of non-IB students take IB courses here and there. The workload for the full IB program is incredibly intense. It’s a different thing than 6-7 AP courses a year. DS glad he’s done it, but he doesn’t look back with fondness. If we had to do it over again, I might push him not to do it.
The IB diploma program isn’t more demanding than 6-7 AP courses a year. In fact, if you load up on SL courses it’s probably less demanding. For that reason, most AP schools discourage kids from taking 6-7 AP courses in a single year to avoid burnout. You are starting to sound ridiculous.