Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Google the name of the college and “common data set.” Find the most recent version and look at section C5. Distribution of high school units required and/or recommended.
This won’t answer the Q of whether a college cares about your MS classes.
Colleges DON'T care about MS classes.
Obviously, right?
You might think it’s obvious but many colleges require students to report middle school courses taken for high school credit on the SRAR.
“Obviously” a college wouldn’t require you to report a class they don’t care about, right?[/quote]
The SRAR? Elite schools don’t use the SRAR. It is mostly big flagships. Maybe NYU and Northeastern use it? Otherwise, it is schools like Clemson, LSU, Penn State. Those types of schools do not care about 4 years of language for admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid took AP foreign language in 10th grade. It freed up his 11th and 12th grade schedule to take other interesting classes. He did 2 years in HS, and three years in MS.
Colleges don't care about MS. Irrelevant to the discussion.
Wouldn't they care about high school credit classes taken in MS?
No.
Colleges look at HS transcripts.
What’s the point of getting high school credit for advanced language classes in middle school if colleges won’t even consider the them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid took AP foreign language in 10th grade. It freed up his 11th and 12th grade schedule to take other interesting classes. He did 2 years in HS, and three years in MS.
Colleges don't care about MS. Irrelevant to the discussion.
Wouldn't they care about high school credit classes taken in MS?
No.
Colleges look at HS transcripts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is a high school sophomore considering courses for junior year. He is taking Spanish IV now but doesn't like it very much. He wants to take AP Chem next year instead of continuing on with Spanish. (AP Chem is two periods, so there isn't room for both; we've been through the rest of the schedule and the only one that makes sense to drop is Spanish.)
He will be applying to reasonably selective colleges. I have heard that some colleges want students to have a certain number of years of foreign lang in high school, or it may hurt them in admissions. But how do I find this info? I don't see it on college websites.
Three if STEM / Business major
Four if Humanities major.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Google the name of the college and “common data set.” Find the most recent version and look at section C5. Distribution of high school units required and/or recommended.
This won’t answer the Q of whether a college cares about your MS classes.
Colleges DON'T care about MS classes.
Obviously, right?
You might think it’s obvious but many colleges require students to report middle school courses taken for high school credit on the SRAR.
“Obviously” a college wouldn’t require you to report a class they don’t care about, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes it matters if it's in HS or MS - selective colleges want to see 4 years in HS (same language, not Spanish 3 and 4 and then French 1 and 2). You have to show rigor compared to classmates, and the way to do that is foreign language, math, and science. And lots of AP or IB courses
OP here - I understand the need to show rigor, but it's a tradeoff. He can either take Spanish V or he can take AP Chem. Can't fit both in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Google the name of the college and “common data set.” Find the most recent version and look at section C5. Distribution of high school units required and/or recommended.
This won’t answer the Q of whether a college cares about your MS classes.
Colleges DON'T care about MS classes.
Obviously, right?
Anonymous wrote:Google the name of the college and “common data set.” Find the most recent version and look at section C5. Distribution of high school units required and/or recommended.
This won’t answer the Q of whether a college cares about your MS classes.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you should be more concerned about him getting -out- of college. College requirements for entrance are there for a reason. Will he have to take a FL in college to graduate? Depends. Research that and you'll know the college will view his application.