Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it true that your kid has to start a language in 7th grade to even be considered eligible for IB (i.e. they need to be in level 2 of a language in 8th grade)? Or is pre-IB optional and you can choose IB later in high school so it doesn't matter? That seems insane to weed out that early. I don't see my kid going down this path, just curious.
Yes, that's in the listed requirements: https://wl.apsva.us/international-baccalaureate-program/application-information/
They also have to take ALL intensified classes in 9th and 10th grade + AP Government in 10th grade. So, even these "Pre-IB" years are a pretty hefty schedule.
fyi the AP Gov thing is because US Government is a state-required class but there isn't room for it in the IB 11th-12th schedule. I believe at the other HS's it's generally a seniors class.
Anonymous wrote:Is it true that your kid has to start a language in 7th grade to even be considered eligible for IB (i.e. they need to be in level 2 of a language in 8th grade)? Or is pre-IB optional and you can choose IB later in high school so it doesn't matter? That seems insane to weed out that early. I don't see my kid going down this path, just curious.
Anonymous wrote:An IB student from W-L went to Univ of Toronto, another to Queens College Ontario. Last year, one went to Leiden in the Netherlands (run in English). Those are fine schools than run families half what private US colleges do, 34-40K a year and yes, students can take out Stafford Loans to attend.
Anonymous wrote:It's a growing tiny minority at a time when private colleges run you 80K+ a year and many of us are in the fi aid doughnut. Our suburban DC houses and salaries are too valuable for us to qualify for aid but we can't afford to pay without borrowing heavily. If our kids don't get into UVA or CoWM a top univ in Canada and the UK may work out better than a VA public college where most students commute (I'd put George Mason in that category). Obama ensured that American students can borrow from the Stafford Loan program to attend many of the best universities abroad.
Anonymous wrote:Families of strong W-L students considering college abroad are well advised to go with IBD. Look on the web sites of top colleges in Canada, the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands etc. Colleges abroad that attract some American undergrads for BA work routinely publish IBD points total cut offs for applicants and generally prefer IB to AP background. We're looking college bargains in Scotland, Amsterdam, Dublin, Toronto etc. as a back-up in case our eldest doesn't crack UVA. Kid has doubled up on AP exams in four subjects (with IB exams in those subjects in June). His standardized test scores, high 700s on SATs, 6-7s on two early IB exams junior year and 5s on AP, are much stronger than his GPA. His GPA might not work for UVA. Glad that our kid is on track for full IB on the road to affordable college options.
Anonymous wrote:Families of strong W-L students considering college abroad are well advised to go with IBD. Look on the web sites of top colleges in Canada, the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands etc. Colleges abroad that attract some American undergrads for BA work routinely publish IBD points total cut offs for applicants and generally prefer IB to AP background. We're looking college bargains in Scotland, Amsterdam, Dublin, Toronto etc. as a back-up in case our eldest doesn't crack UVA. Kid has doubled up on AP exams in four subjects (with IB exams in those subjects in June). His standardized test scores, high 700s on SATs, 6-7s on two early IB exams junior year and 5s on AP, are much stronger than his GPA. His GPA might not work for UVA. Glad that our kid is on track for full IB on the road to affordable college options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP is more rigorous than IB, which is what school systems implement in failing schools to create the illusion of rigor.
Maybe in Fairfax County where it has been badly implemented at the highest poverty schools.
In APS, IB is only grades 11 and 12, so students have plenty of time to figure out if an AP/IB mix, mostly AP, or the full IB diploma aligns with their academic and university goals.
Anonymous wrote:AP is more rigorous than IB, which is what school systems implement in failing schools to create the illusion of rigor.
Anonymous wrote:AP is more rigorous than IB, which is what school systems implement in failing schools to create the illusion of rigor.