Anonymous wrote:If you ask your high school counselor in FCPS, they won't give an answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid graduated from McLean last year with 9 APs. I'm pretty sure that counted as "most rigorous". I don't think there are any APs for 9th graders and only one for 10th (AP World) though I do understand some kids request and get permission to enroll before they are technically eligible. She graduated with a 4.5 something GPA. Didn't apply to any top 20 schools but got into UVA (and is there now).
Did she apply ED?
Anonymous wrote:DC took 10 at Langley and was not considered “most rigorous”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really depends on the high school. Different schools have different class offerings. Also, your kid wants to take a sufficient number to be, for example, in the top 10% of the class.
As an aside, I think is daunting to look at admissions numbers and see that the average admitted student to UVa or UMCP from Fairfax or Montgomery county has something like a 4.5 weighted GPA, and then work backwards to see how many APs that requires.
OP here. My kid is at Langley. It feels like everyone takes at least 10 AP so that would not be considered rigorous. I hate that my kid is at this pressure cooker school.
The seniors parents I know or the ones who had kids graduate seemed stressed about even getting into UVA with perfect grades. These kids all have 4.5+ GPAs.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't this subjective though?
My kid has 11 APs... which may look like a lot, but their school has 26 available. So what is most rigorous.. half, most?
Anonymous wrote:My kid graduated from McLean last year with 9 APs. I'm pretty sure that counted as "most rigorous". I don't think there are any APs for 9th graders and only one for 10th (AP World) though I do understand some kids request and get permission to enroll before they are technically eligible. She graduated with a 4.5 something GPA. Didn't apply to any top 20 schools but got into UVA (and is there now).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really depends on the high school. Different schools have different class offerings. Also, your kid wants to take a sufficient number to be, for example, in the top 10% of the class.
As an aside, I think is daunting to look at admissions numbers and see that the average admitted student to UVa or UMCP from Fairfax or Montgomery county has something like a 4.5 weighted GPA, and then work backwards to see how many APs that requires.
OP here. My kid is at Langley. It feels like everyone takes at least 10 AP so that would not be considered rigorous. I hate that my kid is at this pressure cooker school.
The seniors parents I know or the ones who had kids graduate seemed stressed about even getting into UVA with perfect grades. These kids all have 4.5+ GPAs.
That’s the problem, when a school gives out too many As, every one has the same gpa and it becomes arbitrary as to who gets in and who doesn’t .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It really depends on the high school. Different schools have different class offerings. Also, your kid wants to take a sufficient number to be, for example, in the top 10% of the class.
As an aside, I think is daunting to look at admissions numbers and see that the average admitted student to UVa or UMCP from Fairfax or Montgomery county has something like a 4.5 weighted GPA, and then work backwards to see how many APs that requires.
OP here. My kid is at Langley. It feels like everyone takes at least 10 AP so that would not be considered rigorous. I hate that my kid is at this pressure cooker school.
The seniors parents I know or the ones who had kids graduate seemed stressed about even getting into UVA with perfect grades. These kids all have 4.5+ GPAs.
Anonymous wrote:Isn't this subjective though?
My kid has 11 APs... which may look like a lot, but their school has 26 available. So what is most rigorous.. half, most?
Anonymous wrote:Isn't this subjective though?
My kid has 11 APs... which may look like a lot, but their school has 26 available. So what is most rigorous.. half, most?