Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
Can every kid get a textbook in those classes? Are some kids forced into those classes? Are the teachers actually preparing students for these tests? Does the school AP/IB pathway align with developmentally appropriate skills or other grade level curriculum?
Einstein is a hot mess in this area. Less than 10% of kids getting the IB diploma. Why not offer AP where kids can get college credit for a one year course versus needing the HL Ib courses? Not everyone is trying to go to UMD!
People keep spouting these figures, but I've never seen anything published about schools' IB diploma rates.
It’s published on office of accountability website, every year. The calculation is total # of students get IB diploma divided by total # of senior students, so RM diploma rate appears low. I’m not familiar with Einstein. If IB is provided to everyone in Einstein, the diploma rate is a good measure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
Can every kid get a textbook in those classes? Are some kids forced into those classes? Are the teachers actually preparing students for these tests? Does the school AP/IB pathway align with developmentally appropriate skills or other grade level curriculum?
Einstein is a hot mess in this area. Less than 10% of kids getting the IB diploma. Why not offer AP where kids can get college credit for a one year course versus needing the HL Ib courses? Not everyone is trying to go to UMD!
People keep spouting these figures, but I've never seen anything published about schools' IB diploma rates.
It’s published on office of accountability website, every year. The calculation is total # of students get IB diploma divided by total # of senior students, so RM diploma rate appears low. I’m not familiar with Einstein. If IB is provided to everyone in Einstein, the diploma rate is a good measure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
No, they don't offer that many and there are zero science AP's, no music AP and not other things either.
Based on the discussions on this forum, I feel the numbers shared on the office of accountability for archived information is significantly inaccurate, potentially significantly over-estimating the real course offering. They can offer a course every few years and call it an offering. I remember for the published test results, Einstein has only about 6 IB test data inputs there, so what about the other 32 IB courses?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
Can every kid get a textbook in those classes? Are some kids forced into those classes? Are the teachers actually preparing students for these tests? Does the school AP/IB pathway align with developmentally appropriate skills or other grade level curriculum?
Einstein is a hot mess in this area. Less than 10% of kids getting the IB diploma. Why not offer AP where kids can get college credit for a one year course versus needing the HL Ib courses? Not everyone is trying to go to UMD!
People keep spouting these figures, but I've never seen anything published about schools' IB diploma rates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
Can every kid get a textbook in those classes? Are some kids forced into those classes? Are the teachers actually preparing students for these tests? Does the school AP/IB pathway align with developmentally appropriate skills or other grade level curriculum?
Einstein is a hot mess in this area. Less than 10% of kids getting the IB diploma. Why not offer AP where kids can get college credit for a one year course versus needing the HL Ib courses? Not everyone is trying to go to UMD!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
No, they don't offer that many and there are zero science AP's, no music AP and not other things either.
Based on the discussions on this forum, I feel the numbers shared on the office of accountability for archived information is significantly inaccurate, potentially significantly over-estimating the real course offering. They can offer a course every few years and call it an offering. I remember for the published test results, Einstein has only about 6 IB test data inputs there, so what about the other 32 IB courses?
They are listed here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ahQmKa3acSRnJPnTI4UnQ23eQj5GXYUFaBQio0PtgfI/edit?tab=t.0
You don't get what I meant. I'm saying a lot of these AP and IB courses can be offered, but then they couldn't due to lack of student enrollment, or lack of appropriate teacher, or other reasons.
For example, IB math has a lower-level course called "IB math studies" and a higher level called "IB math". For Einstein, there is no IB math test score for year 2022 and 2023, no IB physics score for 2020 and 2022, no IB biology score for 2021 and 2024. That means these courses were actually not offered, or no one from these classes registered for IB testing. But on the face value, things look great. You get a ton of options.
Anonymous wrote:Equal opportunity does not lead to equal outcomes. There is no vast amount of untapped talent. Throwing resources at low performers won't significantly lift them. If equity is the goal, the only way to get there is to handicap the very top performers. This is exactly what MCPS is doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
No, they don't offer that many and there are zero science AP's, no music AP and not other things either.
Based on the discussions on this forum, I feel the numbers shared on the office of accountability for archived information is significantly inaccurate, potentially significantly over-estimating the real course offering. They can offer a course every few years and call it an offering. I remember for the published test results, Einstein has only about 6 IB test data inputs there, so what about the other 32 IB courses?
They are listed here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ahQmKa3acSRnJPnTI4UnQ23eQj5GXYUFaBQio0PtgfI/edit?tab=t.0
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
No, they don't offer that many and there are zero science AP's, no music AP and not other things either.
Based on the discussions on this forum, I feel the numbers shared on the office of accountability for archived information is significantly inaccurate, potentially significantly over-estimating the real course offering. They can offer a course every few years and call it an offering. I remember for the published test results, Einstein has only about 6 IB test data inputs there, so what about the other 32 IB courses?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
No, they don't offer that many and there are zero science AP's, no music AP and not other things either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Einstein offers 19 AP courses in addition to the 38 IB courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
What high schools don't offer AP classes? All of them claim to.
They all offer AP classes. The eight IB schools tend to have fewer APs because they also have IBs.
So was the pp complaining about the IB program?
There is one PP, who wanted her kid to go to Wheaton, but he didn't get in and is now at Einstein, and she writes about the "inequity" of being provided IB instead of AP on every thread.
IB is not equal to AP. The lack of AP offerings at Einstein is terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Bethesda schools in particular you'll find that parents and top students actually have found a way around being "dragged down". They take multiple AP classes early, they take more than one "difficult" language to AP, or CC classes outside of school and really over-do the SSL hours in obsessive ways. All to stand out when it comes to college applications.
SSL hours are easy to get depending on the school. The difference is those kids have the access to ap classes unlike kids at other schools.
Hundreds of hours of SSL, like 300+ hours, are time consuming, which is not easy.