Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better to stay in the AP course and accept a lower grade, or notify the college admissions about the dropout.
Colleges consider student's character and personal qualities integral aspects of a student's profile. Even if a student is not seeking equivalent college credits, the application was submitted with those rigorous AP courses as enrolled in senior year, an artifact that would be considered for admission decision. Notifying colleges about courses from which the student has withdrawn and should not be considered part of the applicant's admissions demonstrates the student's commitment to honesty and a proactive approach in addressing potential misrepresentation. Colleges are likely to appreciate the student's candor and responsibility in such situations.
+100. Stay in the class, but aim for a B rather than A. Admissions offer wouldn't be rescinded for a B, but could potentially be for a drop down in level without letting the school know during admissions process.
Don’t inadvertently do any extra learning that you don’t need.
Stop being a d***. Most of these seniors are suffering from burnout. Those that are loading up on APs or equivalent classes have worked incredibly hard and mastered some very hard coursework. We should be proud of them - they will usher in a better tomorrow. These kids wouldn’t be in this place if they didn’t care about learning. They obviously do. In the case of this senior, if he can hold on to his AP classes but throttle down, it may be a better option than dropping the course all together. Why be a jerk about it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better to stay in the AP course and accept a lower grade, or notify the college admissions about the dropout.
Colleges consider student's character and personal qualities integral aspects of a student's profile. Even if a student is not seeking equivalent college credits, the application was submitted with those rigorous AP courses as enrolled in senior year, an artifact that would be considered for admission decision. Notifying colleges about courses from which the student has withdrawn and should not be considered part of the applicant's admissions demonstrates the student's commitment to honesty and a proactive approach in addressing potential misrepresentation. Colleges are likely to appreciate the student's candor and responsibility in such situations.
+100. Stay in the class, but aim for a B rather than A. Admissions offer wouldn't be rescinded for a B, but could potentially be for a drop down in level without letting the school know during admissions process.
Don’t inadvertently do any extra learning that you don’t need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So DC just finished up applications. We've started school up again and they have come to me asking to convert 2 AP classes to regular. They are burnt out after overloading. And now they spent the holiday on applications. After one week of already being sleep deprived, they have made the request. I agree but (and it's a big but) they decided this after we put in what they were taking for this coming semester in the common app. Assuming they get into their dream colleges, could this result in offers being rescinded?
I think the answer is, potentially. Especially if you're talking about a small school vs a state school. Class changes are supposed to be reported and when my DC was accepted to a T20 they were given essentially the dos and don'ts of finishing out high school. If memory serves - finish the classes you're taking, don't get anything below a C, and don't get any more than 2 Cs. That said, I know a kid who went to a SLAC and dropped an AP after being accepted ED, but they ran it by the school first.
Anonymous wrote:So DC just finished up applications. We've started school up again and they have come to me asking to convert 2 AP classes to regular. They are burnt out after overloading. And now they spent the holiday on applications. After one week of already being sleep deprived, they have made the request. I agree but (and it's a big but) they decided this after we put in what they were taking for this coming semester in the common app. Assuming they get into their dream colleges, could this result in offers being rescinded?
Anonymous wrote:My senior kid asked me just this am about switching out of Calc for the spring semester. He is not trying to major in anything math related but wanted to show challenging classes.
If he switches hoping it doesn't mess anything with admissions. At what point do we need to message the schools he applied
He already has a tutor and can't keep head above water in the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better to stay in the AP course and accept a lower grade, or notify the college admissions about the dropout.
Colleges consider student's character and personal qualities integral aspects of a student's profile. Even if a student is not seeking equivalent college credits, the application was submitted with those rigorous AP courses as enrolled in senior year, an artifact that would be considered for admission decision. Notifying colleges about courses from which the student has withdrawn and should not be considered part of the applicant's admissions demonstrates the student's commitment to honesty and a proactive approach in addressing potential misrepresentation. Colleges are likely to appreciate the student's candor and responsibility in such situations.
This is silly. Colleges aren't paying attention to this.
You need a break from all that hard work!
Shut that brain down, spend senior year getting high and getting laid.
Colleges don’t really care about “optics” and “ethics” and “following through on commitments”.
Once the offer letter is in it’s locked forever and there’s nothing anyone can do about it.