Anonymous wrote:The privates not having AP classes definitely hurts their students in college admissions. Public school kids applying to top 20 colleges now routinely have 10+ AP test results to report. Sidwell and GDS kids have a lot less APs and this hurts admission chances at a lot of colleges. Colleges don't have time any more to "really know the rigor" of these small private DC schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP, don't have a kid at this high school, just an observation: a kid at such a high school should be expected to have a sufficient SAT or ACT if they want to attend a school at the level of Yale.
True...but if Yale will also consider AP scores for admission, it ups the arms race. Who is a better applicant...the kid with a 1520 and no AP results, or the kid with a 1450 and 10 5s on 10 AP tests?
Colleges know the quality/rigor of academics at Sidwell/GDS. So the kid with a 1520 will come out ahead IMO. Not having APs does not harm the elite private HS kids
Anonymous wrote:A couple of related items are important to remember. An applicant is judged in context of the school's curriculum. If the school does not offer AP's then there is no expectation that AP tests will be taken. Two, the lack of AP's does not seem to be negatively affecting GDS's college acceptances. They are very strong this year.
More importantly, keep in mind how the schools use things like GPA, SAT/ACT, AP's, etc. It's to determine if the applicant can do the work. In a recent podcast, the Dean of Admissions from Dartmouth said of the 29k applicants last year, 22k met the minimum level of academic competence for admission. Then the focus was on the rest of the application, essays, EC's, recommendations.
Finally, as a GDS US parent, I'm glad that my DC does not have to stress about AP's. 11th and 12th grades are hard enough.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not a fan of the AP industrial complex generally, but having said that, isn't it the case that you would not be expected to take APs if your school does not offer AP classes? My kids went to a BIg 3 school with only one or two AP classes. They took several more exams but only reported the results if they did well. Seemed to work out fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP scores are now important in college admissions. Most kids getting into Yale will need both near perfect SAT/ACT plus 10+ AP scores.
The only place I think this sentiment is going to occur is in threads on DCUM, where plenty of posters incorrectly think that rigor is a race for the most APs rather than an academic threshold.
Anonymous wrote:AP scores are now important in college admissions. Most kids getting into Yale will need both near perfect SAT/ACT plus 10+ AP scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP, don't have a kid at this high school, just an observation: a kid at such a high school should be expected to have a sufficient SAT or ACT if they want to attend a school at the level of Yale.
True...but if Yale will also consider AP scores for admission, it ups the arms race. Who is a better applicant...the kid with a 1520 and no AP results, or the kid with a 1450 and 10 5s on 10 AP tests?
Anonymous wrote:AP scores are now important in college admissions. Most kids getting into Yale will need both near perfect SAT/ACT plus 10+ AP scores.
Anonymous wrote:NP, don't have a kid at this high school, just an observation: a kid at such a high school should be expected to have a sufficient SAT or ACT if they want to attend a school at the level of Yale.