Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think 2/3 deserve college credit for high school work? Not everyone is exceptional at all things.
I don’t. But aside from signaling to colleges, getting college credit is literally the whole point of taking the test. Most school systems don’t pay for the tests, so kids are paying $100+ on tests they never should’ve taken in the first place. My kid took a couple practice tests to understand the scoring. They put “A” for every multiple choice question-THAT got a 1.
Not true. We knew it would help our kid when they got to college. Kid is not skipping courses in their major. Kid has gotten 4.0s every semester in a stem field at a large state u and says high school with all the ap classes was harder.
Reading is fundamental. I said getting credit (for people not looking to signal to top schools on common app) is the core reason why people take the test. Not necessarily the class.
Anonymous wrote:Have all students received their scores? My child hasn’t mentioned getting his.
Anonymous wrote:Are they out for AP Principles of Computer Science? They had to do a project instead of an exam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think 2/3 deserve college credit for high school work? Not everyone is exceptional at all things.
I don’t. But aside from signaling to colleges, getting college credit is literally the whole point of taking the test. Most school systems don’t pay for the tests, so kids are paying $100+ on tests they never should’ve taken in the first place. My kid took a couple practice tests to understand the scoring. They put “A” for every multiple choice question-THAT got a 1.
Not true. We knew it would help our kid when they got to college. Kid is not skipping courses in their major. Kid has gotten 4.0s every semester in a stem field at a large state u and says high school with all the ap classes was harder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you think 2/3 deserve college credit for high school work? Not everyone is exceptional at all things.
I don’t. But aside from signaling to colleges, getting college credit is literally the whole point of taking the test. Most school systems don’t pay for the tests, so kids are paying $100+ on tests they never should’ve taken in the first place. My kid took a couple practice tests to understand the scoring. They put “A” for every multiple choice question-THAT got a 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was the bell curve for APUSH
5: 11.8%
4: 19.2%
3: 26.6%
2: 20.4%
1: 21%
So 2/3 of the test takers will likely never receive credit for their tests (my kid’s “mediocre” college only gives credit for 4s and 5s). Thanks college board and the public school system!
That’s why my kid did DE courses. All the credit counted.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get this. Colleges receive the AP scores of all students to? Even the ones who didn’t apply there? My daughter is a Freshman and took an AP exam. Are you telling me that colleges have her score?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps should have added UMD Students to your title?
I am sorry I assumed that the College board would have sent to all universities simultaneously. I didn’t think UMD would get special treatment
Not every school has them posted before they are given to the students..
NP. True but they are pushed to all colleges at once. Like the SAT scores, each college retrieves them on their own timeline and pushes them to student's profiles on their own schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid’s private HS only allows AP courses in students have a sold A in a previous honors course. My son has only gotten one A in an honors course (they are tons of work) so he is allowed to take one AP course. Previous high performance is a good indicator of future success.
Not always. My kid never got an A in math for reason unrelated to aptitude, and then matured and got an A in BC Calc and a 5 on the test. At your school, he wouldn't have been allowed to even take it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was the bell curve for APUSH
5: 11.8%
4: 19.2%
3: 26.6%
2: 20.4%
1: 21%
So 2/3 of the test takers will likely never receive credit for their tests (my kid’s “mediocre” college only gives credit for 4s and 5s). Thanks college board and the public school system!
Anonymous wrote:My kid’s private HS only allows AP courses in students have a sold A in a previous honors course. My son has only gotten one A in an honors course (they are tons of work) so he is allowed to take one AP course. Previous high performance is a good indicator of future success.