Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Whether it does or doesn’t (and I don’t think it does in this context at my kids’ hs, I think it is just the equivalent of french 5 honors), no one (i.e., college admissions) would understand that when no other courses on the transcript are listed as “advanced level.” Meaning, as my kids’ hs there are lots of honors and AP classes but no advanced, with the exception of french/spanish 5. So it stands out that this one class isn’t being taken as honors.
AP and IB classes are also Advanced Level.
This is true. Just scroll through the HS course bulletin and look in the Course Info column. Every course with "(AL)" there is Advanced Level, and there are many.
http://coursebulletin.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/publications/HSCourseBulletin2024.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At BCC it has honors in parentheses. French 5A/3B (Honors). Same with Spanish and Chinese.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1556jHAFThI9iv1Ob8pNa2UTmklQUkYa-VqOinsaNdyY/edit#gid=1912123422
And, BCC has French 6 (Honors), in addition to the AP. What is the rationale for that?? Does it have to do with their student population?
I think they are just putting Honors in parentheses as a shortcut to saying these level 5 and 6 classes are not actually Honors, but receive the same GPA weight as if they were.
But why take away the honors designation when there is a 3 and 4 honors? Is it because the regular honors track is honors 3 and 4, then AP?
The level 5 is mostly for kids who started in 6th Grade, and got to HS for freshman year at level 4, and don't want to to take AP Foreign Lang in sophomore year. It stretches it out and gives more practice. No need to worry about college confusion.
My kid skipped 5 and just took AP as a senior. Very common.
Yes, that is why it is not designated honors, because level 5 is totally optional and if it was honors, they would have to have 2 different curricula. The current system gives the teachers more flexibility.
This is not true - there are other classes offered which are only offered in honors (for example, some mcps high schools only offer honors english 4 in 12th grade, there is no on level english 4).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Whether it does or doesn’t (and I don’t think it does in this context at my kids’ hs, I think it is just the equivalent of french 5 honors), no one (i.e., college admissions) would understand that when no other courses on the transcript are listed as “advanced level.” Meaning, as my kids’ hs there are lots of honors and AP classes but no advanced, with the exception of french/spanish 5. So it stands out that this one class isn’t being taken as honors.
AP and IB classes are also Advanced Level.
This is true. Just scroll through the HS course bulletin and look in the Course Info column. Every course with "(AL)" there is Advanced Level, and there are many.
http://coursebulletin.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/publications/HSCourseBulletin2024.pdf
Absolutely. Advanced level classes are technically beyond honors. PPs here would do well to understand that. It’s a step up, not down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Whether it does or doesn’t (and I don’t think it does in this context at my kids’ hs, I think it is just the equivalent of french 5 honors), no one (i.e., college admissions) would understand that when no other courses on the transcript are listed as “advanced level.” Meaning, as my kids’ hs there are lots of honors and AP classes but no advanced, with the exception of french/spanish 5. So it stands out that this one class isn’t being taken as honors.
AP and IB classes are also Advanced Level.
This is true. Just scroll through the HS course bulletin and look in the Course Info column. Every course with "(AL)" there is Advanced Level, and there are many.
http://coursebulletin.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/publications/HSCourseBulletin2024.pdf
Anonymous wrote:So level 5 of language is optional and is really just for kids who started in 6th to hold off on taking AP until 11th grade? But someone who was ready to take AP after taking Honors Level 4 in freshman year could take AP in sophmore year?
I'm confused becuase there appear to be 7 years in the language sequence at our home school (BCC). Are levels 5 and 6 both optional?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Whether it does or doesn’t (and I don’t think it does in this context at my kids’ hs, I think it is just the equivalent of french 5 honors), no one (i.e., college admissions) would understand that when no other courses on the transcript are listed as “advanced level.” Meaning, as my kids’ hs there are lots of honors and AP classes but no advanced, with the exception of french/spanish 5. So it stands out that this one class isn’t being taken as honors.
AP and IB classes are also Advanced Level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Whether it does or doesn’t (and I don’t think it does in this context at my kids’ hs, I think it is just the equivalent of french 5 honors), no one (i.e., college admissions) would understand that when no other courses on the transcript are listed as “advanced level.” Meaning, as my kids’ hs there are lots of honors and AP classes but no advanced, with the exception of french/spanish 5. So it stands out that this one class isn’t being taken as honors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Whether it does or doesn’t (and I don’t think it does in this context at my kids’ hs, I think it is just the equivalent of french 5 honors), no one (i.e., college admissions) would understand that when no other courses on the transcript are listed as “advanced level.” Meaning, as my kids’ hs there are lots of honors and AP classes but no advanced, with the exception of french/spanish 5. So it stands out that this one class isn’t being taken as honors.
Completely agree with this. It creates unnecessary pressure on the kids to skip this course especially since everyone is in "honors" english and "honors" everything else
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Whether it does or doesn’t (and I don’t think it does in this context at my kids’ hs, I think it is just the equivalent of french 5 honors), no one (i.e., college admissions) would understand that when no other courses on the transcript are listed as “advanced level.” Meaning, as my kids’ hs there are lots of honors and AP classes but no advanced, with the exception of french/spanish 5. So it stands out that this one class isn’t being taken as honors.
Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At BCC it has honors in parentheses. French 5A/3B (Honors). Same with Spanish and Chinese.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1556jHAFThI9iv1Ob8pNa2UTmklQUkYa-VqOinsaNdyY/edit#gid=1912123422
And, BCC has French 6 (Honors), in addition to the AP. What is the rationale for that?? Does it have to do with their student population?
I think they are just putting Honors in parentheses as a shortcut to saying these level 5 and 6 classes are not actually Honors, but receive the same GPA weight as if they were.
But why take away the honors designation when there is a 3 and 4 honors? Is it because the regular honors track is honors 3 and 4, then AP?
The level 5 is mostly for kids who started in 6th Grade, and got to HS for freshman year at level 4, and don't want to to take AP Foreign Lang in sophomore year. It stretches it out and gives more practice. No need to worry about college confusion.
My kid skipped 5 and just took AP as a senior. Very common.
Yes, that is why it is not designated honors, because level 5 is totally optional and if it was honors, they would have to have 2 different curricula. The current system gives the teachers more flexibility.
Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t “Advanced Level” trump “Honors” anyway? Most of my kid’s magnet classes are “advanced” rather than honors.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if top colleges that require four years of foreign language in high school frown on the kid who takes French 4 in 9th grade and AP French in 10th and then stops?? Or, maybe they are confused by that?? The kid's transcript would show only two years of foreign language in high school. Is the French 5 and 6 a way to get around that confusion, I wonder?