Anonymous wrote:My TJHSST Class of 2020 kid had the following progression:
9th
None
10th
World History (TJ doesn't offer the class, but kid took the exam and got a 5)
11th
AP Calc AB
AP Spanish
AP Computer Science
AP US History
12th
AP English Language
AP Gov't
Oceanography Rsch Lab (post-AP)
Artificial Intelligence (Post-AP)
AP Calculus BC
Mobile and Web App Dev (post-AP)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've been seeing this a lot... Rigor rating= what is typical AP practice in your HS vs what your kid is taking
So how do we know what's typical?
We are in FCPS and from what I hear:
Freshmen are not allowed to take AP
Sophomores limited to one AP
then I don't know what Juniors and Seniors do
What's it like in your high school?
It isn’t always the number of APs, but the rigor of the APs. BC Calc, Physics C, Chemistry, Biology, One of the AP English is far different from AP Stats, AP Econ, AP Psych, AP Environmental Science and AP World History.
AP world and AP lit are two of the hardest classes at our mcps high school. vs everyone gets an A in ap calculus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've been seeing this a lot... Rigor rating= what is typical AP practice in your HS vs what your kid is taking
So how do we know what's typical?
We are in FCPS and from what I hear:
Freshmen are not allowed to take AP
Sophomores limited to one AP
then I don't know what Juniors and Seniors do
What's it like in your high school?
It isn’t always the number of APs, but the rigor of the APs. BC Calc, Physics C, Chemistry, Biology, One of the AP English is far different from AP Stats, AP Econ, AP Psych, AP Environmental Science and AP World History.
Anonymous wrote:My kid’s math teacher is apoplectic about AP Pre Calc - it is not a college class. College-bound students should have taken pre-calculus, at a minimum, during high school.
My kid’s HS says 3 APs TOTAL is average on college profile, though anecdotally his friends all have several more. My kid has 6 classes and has taken/will take 7 exams. All 5s on the exams so far. He applied to top 20 school ED (not Ivy).
Although, once he knows where he is going, he will confirm the college accepts AP credit. His ED does (gets you out of core requirements). But, if he ends up elsewhere and they don’t accept, he isn’t going to sit for spring AP exams.
Anonymous wrote:I know no one who is taking 6 APs both junior and senior year. They’d just be taking APs for the sake of taking APs. Even with 30 APs offered, it’s not logical without just being a grinder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid’s math teacher is apoplectic about AP Pre Calc - it is not a college class. College-bound students should have taken pre-calculus, at a minimum, during high school.
My kid’s HS says 3 APs TOTAL is average on college profile, though anecdotally his friends all have several more. My kid has 6 classes and has taken/will take 7 exams. All 5s on the exams so far. He applied to top 20 school ED (not Ivy).
Although, once he knows where he is going, he will confirm the college accepts AP credit. His ED does (gets you out of core requirements). But, if he ends up elsewhere and they don’t accept, he isn’t going to sit for spring AP exams.
I think most colleges actually do teach precalc now, as a practical matter. Even T20s. Because they all use in-house placement tests (actually mostly ALEKS) and they can’t kick out a new freshman for failing the placement test.
But the other reason the College Board is doing it is because having AP Stats and not AP Precalc creates a counterproductive incentive for kids to take AP Stats instead of AP Precalc after Alg2. Also, this will allow kids who take Precalc as juniors to have a score available to submit to the “test blind” UC Schools.
Anonymous wrote:My kid’s math teacher is apoplectic about AP Pre Calc - it is not a college class. College-bound students should have taken pre-calculus, at a minimum, during high school.
My kid’s HS says 3 APs TOTAL is average on college profile, though anecdotally his friends all have several more. My kid has 6 classes and has taken/will take 7 exams. All 5s on the exams so far. He applied to top 20 school ED (not Ivy).
Although, once he knows where he is going, he will confirm the college accepts AP credit. His ED does (gets you out of core requirements). But, if he ends up elsewhere and they don’t accept, he isn’t going to sit for spring AP exams.
Anonymous wrote:Our APS doesn't offer AP to freshman and that makes sense. It's beyond ridiculous to be offering college classes to 15 year olds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know no one who is taking 6 APs both junior and senior year. They’d just be taking APs for the sake of taking APs. Even with 30 APs offered, it’s not logical without just being a grinder.
Not true- my DC is a senior, and not even in the group trying for ivies, and they took these APs in 11th grade: english lang, world history, bc calc, chinese, bio, and psych; and in grade 12: micro/macro, stat, MV, english lit, human geo, physics.
Filling schedule with classes like Human Geo just to take another AP. It’s transparent.
What else should a kid take who is interested in exploring that subject?