Anonymous wrote:BioAnonymous wrote:Start APs early, or IB if available. That is where the rigor is.
OP here and the challenge is that high schools don't set you up to take APs early. That's why I think sharing information is going to be helpful. If you need Honors Bio to get to AP Bio, then the advice should be to knock that class out freshman year so you can get to AP Bio as soon as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem is that schools aren't set up for a small group of students to take an alternative path.
A few years ago, our school allowed (by petition) for students to skip honors bio and go straight to AP bio. Same for Chem, I think, but that was less popular.
They did this for a couple of years, and then the AP-arm's race took over and every kid aspiring to a top university tried to join this path (because if they didn't, they thought they would be 'behind' their peers on college applications).
Such a practice worked fine for a small group of kids who could succeed without the prereq. But when lots of kids wanted to do it, it simultanously created a lot of kids not doing well and also watered down the experience for the kids who wanted to the more rigorous experience. (It's fine and dandy to say teachers shouldn't slow things down to accommodate less prepared kids, but it doesn't really work that way.)
After a couple of years of allowing this, the school ultimately went back to enforcing the prerequisite strictly. Over the last 5 years, I've never heard of a kid successfully skipping the honors prereq.
If schools can figure out an objective way to really assess kids for skipping prereqs (maybe a placement test), a more rigorous pathway would really open. But so far, they've never done this effectively-- at least at our school.
The way this has worked out REALLY well in my opinion is on the physics track. AP Physics 1 is a great and more rigorous alternative to honors physics. It would be great if bio and chem had a similar class--much more rigorous than the honors version, but not skipping straight to the advanced AP version of the science class.
Who keeps telling this lie about AP Physics 1. Unless you’re in a magnet program, AP Physics 1 is not more rigorous. And because half the kids haven’t gotten to Pre-Cal it’s impossible for it to be. It’s Algebra based. Both AP Physics 1 and AP Pre-Cal should be stopped since most colleges are not giving credit for either. This is how we get 9th graders trying to take AP classes. And while some scientist do think Physics should be taken first, this course is not more rigorous as kids Algebra skills are not deep enough for it to be.
Have you looked at the questions for AP Physics 1. They are at a much higher level than Honors Physics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a magnet parent, I cannot understand why MCPS does not make the magnet curriculum, syllabus, textbooks, resources, tests, reviews and projects available on the MCPS website?
It is not as if everyone will rush to copy it. Only kids who are interested can pick and choose. Why not?
MCPS doesn’t do that for the comprehensive curriculum either. In their view, all curriculum (and supports) are intellectual property of MCPS that the district paid its employees to put together. They aren’t worried about an ambitious kid or parent accessing it. They don’t want another school district or a private doing so.
lol you are referring to the Curriculum 2.0 boondoggle that MCPS wasted a fortune to write,wrote and tried to sell, and then threw in the trash and bought New York's Engage/Eureka which is sold at cost, not for profit, because they aren't evil and stupid like MCPS leadership?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a magnet parent, I cannot understand why MCPS does not make the magnet curriculum, syllabus, textbooks, resources, tests, reviews and projects available on the MCPS website?
It is not as if everyone will rush to copy it. Only kids who are interested can pick and choose. Why not?
MCPS doesn’t do that for the comprehensive curriculum either. In their view, all curriculum (and supports) are intellectual property of MCPS that the district paid its employees to put together. They aren’t worried about an ambitious kid or parent accessing it. They don’t want another school district or a private doing so.
lol you are referring to the Curriculum 2.0 boondoggle that MCPS wasted a fortune to write,wrote and tried to sell, and then threw in the trash and bought New York's Engage/Eureka which is sold at cost, not for profit, because they aren't evil and stupid like MCPS leadership?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other post about rigor made me think about how we might pool our collective knowledge to help new HS parents support their kids in building a rigorous HS path outside the Magnets.
Right now, it seems like the standard guidance really short-changes kids who are ready for a challenge, particularly in 9th and 10th, with the "Honors for All" model. So, if you were helping a bright kid choose classes for 9th and 10th, what would you advise?
Just stop.
All MCPS HS's have rigorous classes.
It is not "honors for all" many kids take regular classes and gee wiz they also go to college and do well in life.
If you want "rigorous" your kid must be qualified to take higher math and science. AP's and Honors.
Why is this a hard concept?
My kids did math at min 2 years a head of their peers from 3rd grade on. Is your kid that advanced? Doubt it.
Another MCPS parent who thinks their gifted kid is Young Sheldon. Idiot.
Anonymous wrote:My DC took AP Lang in 10th grade. TBH, 9th grade would have been better. I had to push for it, but the I'm school finally did it. I don't know why the school gated this class, since College Board doesn't have any requirements for AP Lang.
DC also took AP Gov (9th) and APUSH in 10th, both of which are pretty common in MCPS HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a magnet parent, I cannot understand why MCPS does not make the magnet curriculum, syllabus, textbooks, resources, tests, reviews and projects available on the MCPS website?
It is not as if everyone will rush to copy it. Only kids who are interested can pick and choose. Why not?
MCPS doesn’t do that for the comprehensive curriculum either. In their view, all curriculum (and supports) are intellectual property of MCPS that the district paid its employees to put together. They aren’t worried about an ambitious kid or parent accessing it. They don’t want another school district or a private doing so.
Anonymous wrote:And what did your kid do for WL after 10th grade? Colleges want to see 3 years of WL in HS
Anonymous wrote:AP, IB and Honor, are there a difference in the same subjects? Newbie in the education system here. Does a kid has to be referred or recommended or take prerequisite before taking AP, IB or Honors?
Anonymous wrote:As a magnet parent, I cannot understand why MCPS does not make the magnet curriculum, syllabus, textbooks, resources, tests, reviews and projects available on the MCPS website?
It is not as if everyone will rush to copy it. Only kids who are interested can pick and choose. Why not?
Anonymous wrote:Work backwards from HS courses. Some of the groundwork for HS courses are done in MS. My kid could take AP Spanish in 10th grade since she took Spanish 1, 2, 3 in MS. The MS and HS, both were magnet track. So, how could a kid get access to magnet level FL in MS if it is not being offered in his school.
That is the reason that the curricullum, materials, textbooks should be made available to all.