Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD was just accepted and was wondering how they did once in college. It seems like everyone these days gets straight As in HS. DD is looking into a stem major. TIA
Beautifully! STEM major. 2024 MCPS grad and can graduate December 2026.
Thanks MC2!
Can, but will?
Why throw away a gift of 4 years of public university education?
Four years aren’t needed thanks to MC2.
Looking at going directly to grad school. An advanced degree is a must in the field. Career can’t start until after grad school.
There’s no economic incentive to taking unneeded undergrad courses and a fair amount of economic incentive to starting a career 1-1.5 years earlier.
Anonymous wrote:My experience with students (not my own kids) at UMD is that those who struggle either a. Got by with a lot of cheating in high school b. Had a lot of help from parents to complete work through high school or c. Took weed-you-out science intro classes early on. It can be a shock to the system if you’re used to As snd hoping for a B-. But thefe is a shocking amount of cheating in MCPS that the system needs to take a hard look at if they want their grads to be successful college students.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS prepare my kids well for the academics and a big college experience.
The first year transition for DC1 had some bumps as they learned to balance a job, academics, relationships, and campus living.
Both kids grew a lot and really benefitted from the variety of clubs/activities outside of class.
DC1 currently in graduate school (STEM). Graduate of College Park. Eventually became a TA and got great recommendations from professors.
DC2 humanities major at a different big 10. Diligent student and doing great.
Good luck!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD was just accepted and was wondering how they did once in college. It seems like everyone these days gets straight As in HS. DD is looking into a stem major. TIA
Any kid I know from MCPS did great.
How is this even a question?
Stop with the everyone gets an A crap it's not true.
What is true is MCPS is a large diverse population and plenty of kids graduate with A's, B's, etc some even don't graduate. All of that has more to do with parents than the schools.
Anonymous wrote:My DD was just accepted and was wondering how they did once in college. It seems like everyone these days gets straight As in HS. DD is looking into a stem major. TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS has changed so much in the past five years, that I would have concerns:
1) Five years ago, students in MCPS took mid-year and final year exams. These exams had weight and they prepared MCPS students on how to study for a cumulative test that took two hours. Current graduating seniors never had that experience.
2) Late work at UMD is not accepted and students do not get 50% for an assignment not handed in.
3) Realize, in college As and Bs are earned. With a bell curve, that means you have to do better than the average for an A or B. A college student has to learn from mistakes and realize not everything will be As and Bs.
4) Professors will lock you out of class if you are late and they will kick you out if you are disruptive (ie. phone rings or talking).
5) Grades are not everything to get you beyond an undergraduate degree. If a STEM student, apply to join a research team such as UMD’s FIRE program. If not STEM, college internships are needed for real life experience. What your child does outside of the classroom in college is vital for either your first job or grad school.
1) All of this was true when I attended UMCP 20 years ago. Every single point, including no acceptance of late assignments.
2) These are generally true of other competitive schools, public and private.
DD graduated mcps 5 years ago with no midterms or finals. I think they disappeared before DS 18 graduated. It's been a long time. My kids managed fine in college.