Anonymous wrote:OMG, who cares.
Anonymous wrote:My kids school does not have A-. An A is an A.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS doesn't have + or - . An A is an A, and honestly, that seems more logical than counting A and A+ as an A, but not A-. Where would be the logic of that? If you wanted to isolate the A and A+, instead of calling is straight As (which should include ALL types of As), you should refer to it as a 4+ gpa, because that's what it actually means.
It bugs me that people aren't accurate.
A+ is not an A!
Straight As means all As. No A-, no A+.
Logic!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Straight As include A-.
This. And I will add Straight As (with A-) are better at some schools than others. Our's requires a 93 to get an A. My daughter has A- in her AP classes...they are borderline As around 92%. As far as I am concerned, she is a straight A student.
To the person complaining her kid didn't ED into a college with A-, I doubt very much that was the reason. There are lots of other aspects of the application that would turn a student away. Uninspiring essay, mediocre teacher recommendations, no meaningful ECs, etc. I hope your kid gets into a schools he/she likes.
Anonymous wrote:I recently discovered that when my kids say someone has "straight As," it means that the student does not have any Bs or Cs (or Ds or Fs obviously), but a student with all "A-"s would still consider themselves a "straight A student." I always thought a "straight A" student had a 4.0 UW. Am I in the minority here?
Anonymous wrote:I recently discovered that when my kids say someone has "straight As," it means that the student does not have any Bs or Cs (or Ds or Fs obviously), but a student with all "A-"s would still consider themselves a "straight A student." I always thought a "straight A" student had a 4.0 UW. Am I in the minority here?
Anonymous wrote:My kid has no Bs of any sort but has some A minuses at a top private high school (Big3) and did not get into an ED ranked around 30 despite an otherwise very strong application. So colleges seem to want all As without the minuses.
Anonymous wrote:Straight As include A-.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently discovered that when my kids say someone has "straight As," it means that the student does not have any Bs or Cs (or Ds or Fs obviously), but a student with all "A-"s would still consider themselves a "straight A student." I always thought a "straight A" student had a 4.0 UW. Am I in the minority here?
No. Straight As means a 4.00 UW GPA. Our three kids are all straight A students. One at Harvard, one at Yale, and one at MIT. All full scholarships.
Those schools have no merit scholarships so for a full ride you have to have less than 170k income. It is pure need based at those places. You are a troll and do not have kids at those schools or you would be well aware of these facts
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has no Bs of any sort but has some A minuses at a top private high school (Big3) and did not get into an ED ranked around 30 despite an otherwise very strong application. So colleges seem to want all As without the minuses.
When I threw a brown egg at the wall it cracked, so things that are brown must break easily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently discovered that when my kids say someone has "straight As," it means that the student does not have any Bs or Cs (or Ds or Fs obviously), but a student with all "A-"s would still consider themselves a "straight A student." I always thought a "straight A" student had a 4.0 UW. Am I in the minority here?
No. Straight As means a 4.00 UW GPA. Our three kids are all straight A students. One at Harvard, one at Yale, and one at MIT. All full scholarships.
Those schools have no merit scholarships so for a full ride you have to have less than 170k income. It is pure need based at those places. You are a troll and do not have kids at those schools or you would be well aware of these facts