Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be super interesting to see a study on whether more APs results in admissions to higher ranked schools after a certain threshold (for example, is 12 really better than 8 for admissions purposes).
IDK but this thread is bonkers. My DC took 9, and I’ve posted here that DC failed several tests. But, then again DC is only at a top-25 school, not top-20.![]()
DC 2 will probably have 7, which is fine and probably normal or even higher than normal at the same school.
Anonymous wrote:It would be super interesting to see a study on whether more APs results in admissions to higher ranked schools after a certain threshold (for example, is 12 really better than 8 for admissions purposes).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've been seeing this a lot... Rigor rating= what is typical AP practice in your HS vs what your kid is taking
So how do we know what's typical?
We are in FCPS and from what I hear:
Freshmen are not allowed to take AP
Sophomores limited to one AP
then I don't know what Juniors and Seniors do
What's it like in your high school?
It isn’t always the number of APs, but the rigor of the APs. BC Calc, Physics C, Chemistry, Biology, One of the AP English is far different from AP Stats, AP Econ, AP Psych, AP Environmental Science and AP World History.
Why bash APWH? That one will get you a few college credits at many colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My student at Langley took 1-3-6-7. He took PE during the summer and extra classes from the online campus.
That is way the outlier and I have insider info on Langley. Folks, even if true this is not norm at Langley where average accelerated path is total of 8-10 APs and the mode is probably 4-5 total APs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've been seeing this a lot... Rigor rating= what is typical AP practice in your HS vs what your kid is taking
So how do we know what's typical?
We are in FCPS and from what I hear:
Freshmen are not allowed to take AP
Sophomores limited to one AP
then I don't know what Juniors and Seniors do
What's it like in your high school?
It isn’t always the number of APs, but the rigor of the APs. BC Calc, Physics C, Chemistry, Biology, One of the AP English is far different from AP Stats, AP Econ, AP Psych, AP Environmental Science and AP World History.
Anonymous wrote:My student at Langley took 1-3-6-7. He took PE during the summer and extra classes from the online campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I've been seeing this a lot... Rigor rating= what is typical AP practice in your HS vs what your kid is taking
So how do we know what's typical?
We are in FCPS and from what I hear:
Freshmen are not allowed to take AP
Sophomores limited to one AP
then I don't know what Juniors and Seniors do
What's it like in your high school?
It isn’t always the number of APs, but the rigor of the APs. BC Calc, Physics C, Chemistry, Biology, One of the AP English is far different from AP Stats, AP Econ, AP Psych, AP Environmental Science and AP World History.
AP world and AP lit are two of the hardest classes at our mcps high school. vs everyone gets an A in ap calculus.
How do kids do on the exams?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My TJHSST Class of 2020 kid had the following progression:
9th
None
10th
World History (TJ doesn't offer the class, but kid took the exam and got a 5)
11th
AP Calc AB
AP Spanish
AP Computer Science
AP US History
12th
AP English Language
AP Gov't
Oceanography Rsch Lab (post-AP)
Artificial Intelligence (Post-AP)
AP Calculus BC
Mobile and Web App Dev (post-AP)
So interesting, I figured all TJ kids took AP Physics C, AP Bio and AP Chem. Do they take those classes before TJ maybe? And also, no 4th year of language?
He would have taken AP Spanish Lit as a 12th grader, but it wasn't offered due to lack of interest. He considered taking AP Physics as a senior, but chose to take an additional post-AP CS class instead (can't remember whether it was the AI class or the web/mobile app development class). Sadly, to me as a former Chemistry major - he wasn't especially interested in more AP Chemistry (though he did end up taking an introductory chemical class in college).
Thanks for the response. Always interesting to hear how other schools and kids structure studies. I am sorry they didn't have AP Spanish Lit - it is an interesting kid who wants to take that and advanced computer science classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My TJHSST Class of 2020 kid had the following progression:
9th
None
10th
World History (TJ doesn't offer the class, but kid took the exam and got a 5)
11th
AP Calc AB
AP Spanish
AP Computer Science
AP US History
12th
AP English Language
AP Gov't
Oceanography Rsch Lab (post-AP)
Artificial Intelligence (Post-AP)
AP Calculus BC
Mobile and Web App Dev (post-AP)
So interesting, I figured all TJ kids took AP Physics C, AP Bio and AP Chem. Do they take those classes before TJ maybe? And also, no 4th year of language?
He would have taken AP Spanish Lit as a 12th grader, but it wasn't offered due to lack of interest. He considered taking AP Physics as a senior, but chose to take an additional post-AP CS class instead (can't remember whether it was the AI class or the web/mobile app development class). Sadly, to me as a former Chemistry major - he wasn't especially interested in more AP Chemistry (though he did end up taking an introductory chemical class in college).

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My TJHSST Class of 2020 kid had the following progression:
9th
None
10th
World History (TJ doesn't offer the class, but kid took the exam and got a 5)
11th
AP Calc AB
AP Spanish
AP Computer Science
AP US History
12th
AP English Language
AP Gov't
Oceanography Rsch Lab (post-AP)
Artificial Intelligence (Post-AP)
AP Calculus BC
Mobile and Web App Dev (post-AP)
So interesting, I figured all TJ kids took AP Physics C, AP Bio and AP Chem. Do they take those classes before TJ maybe? And also, no 4th year of language?