Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No AP classes is ok if your school has 100% fantastic teachers. But no school — including Holton — has 100% fantastic teachers. The lack of AP removes the guardrail protecting against a bad teacher. With AP in place, a bad teacher still has to follow a scheduled curriculum. Without AP, a bad teacher can proceed completely unchecked by fear of accountability from AP test scores (or the need to get through a scheduled curriculum).
Except this is not how any school handles teaching - no AP does not mean that there is a lack of accountability. Our experience is at Holton where the curriculum is well thought out, and a lack of AP test scores doesn't mean that there aren't metrics in place. Each of the departments has a chair and a committee of teachers that has a long arc of planning and developing the curriculum. Sure, individual teachers have different approaches to how they teach, but as a whole, the curriculum is followed. The real benefit of not administering the AP test is that the curriculum is more dynamic and able to change with the times, and is often more interesting and thought provoking for the students and the teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Many Holton girls do very well on AP tests even without taking formal AP classes there. And, yes, they have to study a little bit for them, but primarily to have confidence walking into the test.
Anonymous wrote:Many Holton girls do very well on AP tests even without taking formal AP classes there. And, yes, they have to study a little bit for them, but primarily to have confidence walking into the test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STA has kept them.
No AP classes is ok if your school has 100% fantastic teachers. But no school — including Holton — has 100% fantastic teachers. The lack of AP removes the guardrail protecting against a bad teacher. With AP in place, a bad teacher still has to follow a scheduled curriculum. Without AP, a bad teacher can proceed completely unchecked by fear of accountability from AP test scores (or the need to get through a scheduled curriculum).
THis. Because while it is known that the big 3 don't have them, it is not known that Holton is dropping them so it is going to take several years for college and universities to catch up. Presumably this now means that a 4.0 is the top GPA at Holton, correct? That is a problem when you are competing against a 4.6 from MCPS or FCPS for a slot in a school. Presumably, the college advisor will be on top of this but it will mean a sea change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STA has kept them.
No AP classes is ok if your school has 100% fantastic teachers. But no school — including Holton — has 100% fantastic teachers. The lack of AP removes the guardrail protecting against a bad teacher. With AP in place, a bad teacher still has to follow a scheduled curriculum. Without AP, a bad teacher can proceed completely unchecked by fear of accountability from AP test scores (or the need to get through a scheduled curriculum).
THis. Because while it is known that the big 3 don't have them, it is not known that Holton is dropping them so it is going to take several years for college and universities to catch up. Presumably this now means that a 4.0 is the top GPA at Holton, correct? That is a problem when you are competing against a 4.6 from MCPS or FCPS for a slot in a school. Presumably, the college advisor will be on top of this but it will mean a sea change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STA has kept them.
No AP classes is ok if your school has 100% fantastic teachers. But no school — including Holton — has 100% fantastic teachers. The lack of AP removes the guardrail protecting against a bad teacher. With AP in place, a bad teacher still has to follow a scheduled curriculum. Without AP, a bad teacher can proceed completely unchecked by fear of accountability from AP test scores (or the need to get through a scheduled curriculum).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t matter. The kids who would take Ap are not going to schools that would accept AP. So they just evaluate if you took the most rigorous course offered.
Ivies accept 5s on over 10 subjects. Look for yourself. Do tiny slacs make you redo your language or math or science requirement regardless of major or HS transcript?
They accept them for placing out of certain requirements, not as credits (ie, they don’t help you graduate early or save money).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t matter. The kids who would take Ap are not going to schools that would accept AP. So they just evaluate if you took the most rigorous course offered.
Ivies accept 5s on over 10 subjects. Look for yourself. Do tiny slacs make you redo your language or math or science requirement regardless of major or HS transcript?
They accept them for placing out of certain requirements, not as credits (ie, they don’t help you graduate early or save money).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t matter. The kids who would take Ap are not going to schools that would accept AP. So they just evaluate if you took the most rigorous course offered.
Ivies accept 5s on over 10 subjects. Look for yourself. Do tiny slacs make you redo your language or math or science requirement regardless of major or HS transcript?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NCS has all but phased them out. Sidwell, GDS and Potomac have gotten rid if them too. I don’t know about Maret? It isn’t a big deal. Top privates all over the country have gotten rid if APs.
NCS still has them for languages, sciences and math. It does not feel like they are being phased out, unless next year they are going away.
Anonymous wrote:NCS has all but phased them out. Sidwell, GDS and Potomac have gotten rid if them too. I don’t know about Maret? It isn’t a big deal. Top privates all over the country have gotten rid if APs.
Anonymous wrote:
No AP classes is ok if your school has 100% fantastic teachers. But no school — including Holton — has 100% fantastic teachers. The lack of AP removes the guardrail protecting against a bad teacher. With AP in place, a bad teacher still has to follow a scheduled curriculum. Without AP, a bad teacher can proceed completely unchecked by fear of accountability from AP test scores (or the need to get through a scheduled curriculum).