Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No way.....1 free period is fine, not 2.
+1. Top schools are looking to see if your kid can handle the rigor of college -two free periods says no
said nobody ever
There is advice against free periods from college counselors and admissions officers. Take an elective.
GPA wreckers
Once the gpa is over 4.0 it’s splitting hairs.
not when UVA has a 4.4 floor
UVA doesn't have a 4.4 floor for electives, and someone maxed out on APs is far above 4.4 anyway.
One semester of a non honors class is a 0.02 GPA doffe
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Yes, he will be trying for a few top colleges.
What he will do with 2 free periods:
Semster 1: 1) college apps 2)volunteer math tutor in school's academic center so he won't be doing it as much during lunch and after school like he does this year.
Semester 2: 1) continue tutoring 2) more college apps if EA/ED doesn't work out 3) go out for lunch with friends which he has no time for this year
Sounds like a good use of time to me but I'm no AO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No way.....1 free period is fine, not 2.
+1. Top schools are looking to see if your kid can handle the rigor of college -two free periods says no
said nobody ever
There is advice against free periods from college counselors and admissions officers. Take an elective.
My child's school requires a free period, for everyone. I don't believe that anyone has given this blanket advice.
Then your school would have that in their profile that they send. That's irrelevant here. If your school DOESN'T require a free period, having 2 will impact rigor.
stop saying this. it's not universally true.
At DC's public high school, the free period is not mentioned. Only classes in which the child is enrolled. I would still recommend some other electives just to round out the education - art, psych, econ, environmental science, stats, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No way.....1 free period is fine, not 2.
+1. Top schools are looking to see if your kid can handle the rigor of college -two free periods says no
said nobody ever
There is advice against free periods from college counselors and admissions officers. Take an elective.
GPA wreckers
Once the gpa is over 4.0 it’s splitting hairs.
not when UVA has a 4.4 floor
Anonymous wrote:mine had two. now at yale.
how would a college even know you had a free period. your transcript just list classes
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Yes, he will be trying for a few top colleges.
What he will do with 2 free periods:
Semster 1: 1) college apps 2)volunteer math tutor in school's academic center so he won't be doing it as much during lunch and after school like he does this year.
Semester 2: 1) continue tutoring 2) more college apps if EA/ED doesn't work out 3) go out for lunch with friends which he has no time for this year
Sounds like a good use of time to me but I'm no AO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No way.....1 free period is fine, not 2.
+1. Top schools are looking to see if your kid can handle the rigor of college -two free periods says no
said nobody ever
There is advice against free periods from college counselors and admissions officers. Take an elective.
My child's school requires a free period, for everyone. I don't believe that anyone has given this blanket advice.
Then your school would have that in their profile that they send. That's irrelevant here. If your school DOESN'T require a free period, having 2 will impact rigor.
stop saying this. it's not universally true.
At DC's public high school, the free period is not mentioned. Only classes in which the child is enrolled. I would still recommend some other electives just to round out the education - art, psych, econ, environmental science, stats, etc.
Psych not allowed since he will be taking Euro History. Apparently 2 AP SS/History classes not allowed at this school. Counselor said something about lack of teachers, which sounds sketchy to me.
He's taking Stats this year (along with Calc BC). Will essentially be taking 2 science class next year (Physics and Chem alternating in 1 block period). Has already taken Econ.
I guess the answer here is ap Environmental Science (not really interested), or a non-AP fun elective, which will not be fun for him. He will see it as a waste of time.
Thanks everyone for your input -
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember also the perverse situation that any nonAP will lower their GPA. DS had 2 free period but got all As in 5 AP courses - which apparently impressed the admissions committee at his top 40 first choice college.
This is exactly what DS told me. Non-AP will affect weighted GPA more so than a free period.
No DE offerings at his high school are at the appropriate level or in an area of interest. They are Intro to Life Sciences, Nurse Assistant Training etc. There's also MV Calc/Linear Algebra but that is the 1 math AP he's guaranteed to get next year.
As for transcript, the name of the class is "Early Bird PE" so I guess it will be listed as such? Maybe AOs have no time to look at granular detail though.
Anonymous wrote:I would encourage a fun elective. Some kids find their calling in those “filler” classes.
Anonymous wrote:Has this ever happened to your kid? If so, how did they explain it to colleges in their application materials?
Scenario is DS signed up for early p.e. next year so he could take 2 additional AP courses during the school year. (His school only allows a few APs for sophomore year, so many kids take 4-5 APs junior and senior years. He is taking 5 this year.) In his counselor meeting today, he was told that he isn't allowed to take 2 social science APs in one year and the second math AP cannot be guaranteed. He will most likely have 1 free period next year and quite possibly 2. He has no interest in taking "filler" non-AP courses in these slots, but he has run out of APs to take otherwise.
Would colleges see/notice that he took early p.e., making at least one of the free periods justifiable? He says he could work on college apps during the one free period at least.
Thoughts, other ideas welcome.
Anonymous wrote:Colleges just see the courses you take, not your daily schedule. Our competitive private school advises kids to take 5 core academic classes each year: english, math, history, science, foreign language. Having free periods first semester senior year is good if doesnt interfere with the core academic classes. Applications and essay writing and pressure on senior q1 grades is intense! (My kid did extra electives in 9th/10th but dropped after to keep up grades in core subjects). Kid got ed1 acceptance so pressure is now off. Don't underestimate the amount of time and work required to submit strong application essays...
Anonymous wrote:OP here: Yes, he will be trying for a few top colleges.
What he will do with 2 free periods:
Semster 1: 1) college apps 2)volunteer math tutor in school's academic center so he won't be doing it as much during lunch and after school like he does this year.
Semester 2: 1) continue tutoring 2) more college apps if EA/ED doesn't work out 3) go out for lunch with friends which he has no time for this year
Sounds like a good use of time to me but I'm no AO.
Anonymous wrote:My kid has 2 free periods and accepted to a Top 20 (ranked 10-20).
No explaining. 5 of the 6 classes are AP, and the kid has taken 8 AP through junior year (four 5s and four 4s)...so will be 13 in total through senior year.
Literally, just submitted his transcript through junior year and input senior schedule. Never mentioned anything about the two free periods and the school never asked.