Anonymous wrote:Exactly! Do not judge others for taking more or less APs. Every student should take what is right for them. Period.
Mine takes what I would consider a lot, does 2 varsity sports, volunteers and has time for friends. School just happens to come easy for her. Believe me there are other things that do not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some kids might be doing this. My kids won't be. I won't allow it. They can take a few, but I also want them to have a nice life outside of school. They play sports, are involved in other extra curricular activities. They also have time to just hang out with friends or to relax. My family just personally felt that we wanted to prioritize boundaries, taking care of one's mental health, etc. Maybe some kids are able to take 10 AP's, and play sports and do other extra curriculars and hang out with friends and sleep too. I'm not sure how, but I don't want my kids to try. Whether they go to our state flagship university or to an Ivy, the outcome of their life isn't dependent on where they end up going to college.
Our kids were smart but not geniuses, and managed pretty easily to take 8 to 10 AP classes throughout high school, be involved in extracurriculars, and have active social lives. They typically took one AP sophomore year and four or so in each of the junior and senior years.
Sure your kids can do less, and more power to them. But it's not as tough as you think.
Anonymous wrote:Some kids might be doing this. My kids won't be. I won't allow it. They can take a few, but I also want them to have a nice life outside of school. They play sports, are involved in other extra curricular activities. They also have time to just hang out with friends or to relax. My family just personally felt that we wanted to prioritize boundaries, taking care of one's mental health, etc. Maybe some kids are able to take 10 AP's, and play sports and do other extra curriculars and hang out with friends and sleep too. I'm not sure how, but I don't want my kids to try. Whether they go to our state flagship university or to an Ivy, the outcome of their life isn't dependent on where they end up going to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Starting AP in 8th and 9th grade is unnecessary, and could come back to haunt your student if they get a lower score than they would if they took it later in high school.
She got a 5 in AP World History and a 4 in AP Environmental Science in 8th grade so she's doing OK
Good for her, but it's no wonder colleges are devaluing the AP curriculum. These are supposedly college level courses.
Don't underestimate some of these kids.
Anonymous wrote:What a lot of striver parents don't realize is that this is starting to turn off college admissions officers. It paints the kids as automatons who are doing everything to get into college, rather than kids "pursuing their passions." The people who make their kids self-study for APs on top of school are the ones who really look like this. Let your child join a club instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some posters mention that their kids are taking 9-10 AP classes in high school. How is this even possible? You need to take bio, chem or physics before you take those APs, so that's only 1-2 AP sciences, max. And then maybe AP English, Government, a language, comp sci? that's still only 6. How do kids do it? And doesn't it mean a killer schedule?
Your premise on prereqs is not true of every school.
However, the CB does require that AP sciences are the 2nd exposure, so schools are breaking their agreement by putting kids straight in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid at TJ:
9th - 2 APs - AP CSPrinc, AP Calc BC
10th - 3 APs + 2 DE (dual enrollment univ course) - AP Chem, AP CS A(B), AP World History + DE MultiCalc, DE Linear Algebra
11th - 6 APs + 2 DE - APUSH, AP Physics C&EM, AP Econ Micro&Macro, AP Latin + DE Complex Analysis, DE Diff Eq
12th - 5 APs (3 req'd + 2 elective) + 2 DE - AP LangComp, AP Gov't, AP Env Sci, AP Psych + DE prob/stats (AP stats), DE Advanced Math
14-16 APs (2 are half-year AP pairs, 3 are AP exams taken after similar non-AP or post-AP courses), and 6 semesters univ credit math (+ 4 semesters post-AP CS electives not shown above)
This is a very impressive schedule. Did your child attend an FCPS middle school? Did he or she take summer courses?
Anonymous wrote:Kid at TJ:
9th - 2 APs - AP CSPrinc, AP Calc BC
10th - 3 APs + 2 DE (dual enrollment univ course) - AP Chem, AP CS A(B), AP World History + DE MultiCalc, DE Linear Algebra
11th - 6 APs + 2 DE - APUSH, AP Physics C&EM, AP Econ Micro&Macro, AP Latin + DE Complex Analysis, DE Diff Eq
12th - 5 APs (3 req'd + 2 elective) + 2 DE - AP LangComp, AP Gov't, AP Env Sci, AP Psych + DE prob/stats (AP stats), DE Advanced Math
14-16 APs (2 are half-year AP pairs, 3 are AP exams taken after similar non-AP or post-AP courses), and 6 semesters univ credit math (+ 4 semesters post-AP CS electives not shown above)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Starting AP in 8th and 9th grade is unnecessary, and could come back to haunt your student if they get a lower score than they would if they took it later in high school.
She got a 5 in AP World History and a 4 in AP Environmental Science in 8th grade so she's doing OK
Good for her, but it's no wonder colleges are devaluing the AP curriculum. These are supposedly college level courses.
New poster here. I have an 8th grader whose 7th grade ACT score was higher than either of his high school cousins and good enough to get him into many SLACs. He could do college level courses right now and would not be out of his depth. Not all kids (or college students) operate at the same level. If a younger student is capable of college-level work, that doesn’t mean the work isn’t college-level by virtue of the fact that a non-college student may be advanced enough to handle it.
Anonymous wrote:Way back in the 90s I took 10 and it didn't seem too overwhelming or miserable:
- AP US Gov in 10th grade
- AP US history, AP Physics, AP Calc AB, AP Art History, in 11th
- AP English, AP Comp Government, AP Bio, AP Calc BC, AP French in 12th
At my school, you had to take Bio and Chem before the AP classes, but AP physics could be your first physics class.
I know a lot of schools skip AP Calc AB these days, so if my school did that I would have been down to 9, I guess.