Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are insane.
THANK YOU. I was wondering how long before a normal person entered the thread.![]()
Totally normal for an engineering student. We should be thankful the public schools prepare them for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are insane.
THANK YOU. I was wondering how long before a normal person entered the thread.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
APUSH, APGOV, AP PHYS 2, AP PHYS C, CALC AB, CALC BC, IB COMPSCI, INT CHEM, INT BIO, ALL INTENSIFIED 9th and 10th, NO AP ENG.
Grades were better than your child's, SATs were good, but not 1500.
Engineering freshman at an engineering school ranked in the 20s, doing just fine.
Do you mind sharing which school? I've gone up and down the USNWR best engineering schools and not sure DC can get into any of the top 30 with her/his stats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are insane.
THANK YOU. I was wondering how long before a normal person entered the thread.![]()
This thread is the same as most. If they’re insane why are you here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are insane.
THANK YOU. I was wondering how long before a normal person entered the thread.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are insane.
Parent of an elementary school student? My kid goes to a high school where the choices are on-level classes (which are remedial) or AP. Early on he decided not to take on-level classes in anything that actually interested him, because there is so little content covered that he wouldn't learn anything. Only two AP classes stressed him out, both not in his areas of expertise. He got the best education he could at our local school, and he's going to a great college (but not one that gives DCUM folks heart palpitations) and will be as well-prepared as he can be.
Anonymous wrote:You people are insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an 8th grader and am looking at this thread in awe. Your kids are talented and driven! Are most of them getting 5s on the AP exams?
Me as well. The line that gets me is “He will really need to get his SAT above 1500” When I graduated 30 years ago, I knew of no one who had gotten a 1500.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are insane.
Parent of an elementary school student? My kid goes to a high school where the choices are on-level classes (which are remedial) or AP. Early on he decided not to take on-level classes in anything that actually interested him, because there is so little content covered that he wouldn't learn anything. Only two AP classes stressed him out, both not in his areas of expertise. He got the best education he could at our local school, and he's going to a great college (but not one that gives DCUM folks heart palpitations) and will be as well-prepared as he can be.
No high school kid has “areas of expertise”