Anonymous wrote:The kids do it because they can cheat the entire time, zone out and get a weighted A to boost their GPA. It is a no brainer for the grinders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While imperfect, this is why test scores matter. Amazed by this, not in area.
Same. DD is at a public school in NJ. Kids at her school are not allowed to take courses on-line or somewhere else. No shenanigans like this, and grades actually mean something.
Anonymous wrote:While imperfect, this is why test scores matter. Amazed by this, not in area.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. GPAs in FCPS really are meaningless.
Anonymous wrote:It is absolutely ridiculous that FCPS lets schools offer classes both online and in person. Especially super common APs like APUSH.
And this is also why colleges should go back to requiring test scores. GPA is just not a uniform measuring stick to compare applicants by.
Anonymous wrote:Even if online is "easier" isn't it still an additional class the student has to manage? I have a child finishing junior year and I couldn't imagine her with an extra online class, even an "easy" one, on top of her workload this year.
Anonymous wrote:Outside of T20, no one cares.
For T20's it matters a lot. T20 AO's are going to be familiar with HS's that send a lot of applications to them. Langley most likely is one of them. AO's assigned to your school, knows these kinds of details, and these are precisely the things they are most interested in to narrow down the students.
So if you are not interested in T20's, I would say go with online.
Anonymous wrote:Is this Langley? A ton of students take APs online for exactly this reason. The school’s college advisor has even said that colleges don’t care whether a class is taken online or in person. I get why students would do it if they’re trying to boost their junior year GPA.
But as a parent, I really wouldn’t want my kid taking an AP online. The Langley student-run magazine had a whole article about how easy some of these online APs are — especially APUSH — and how common cheating is.
If it were a class not offered at Langley, like AP Euro, and my kid was genuinely VERY interested, then maybe. But otherwise, I think it’s a terrible idea for both academic and moral development.