Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sidwell Friends phased out AP courses in 2023. They are moving to the Andover model of making their own version of college-level courses.
No one will penalize the Sidwell kids I'm sure for not having APs. As long as they take the hardest classes available to them.
I hope schools doing this still consider teaching AP content to make way for students to sit for AP tests anyway. That's the most equitable path for the (few) students at these schools who are receiving financial aid: when they go to college, if they go to a state school that accepts AP credit, they can come in as a Sophomore and end up spending less at the end of the day. APs are a financial boost for bright, under-resourced kids, and private schools that claim to serve these kids should keep this in mind as a holistic approach to launching them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC is at a school that offers few APs. This year, as a senior, he got permission from his school to take AP BC Calc and AP Chem online. The classes were fairly useless, he says, but I do believe this contributed to his receiving full Banneker Key at UMd. Looks good that he sought out more rigor than was available.
AP exams are pretty low level. Nobody cares anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the science and math APs are good to take and while both my kids attended top NYC privates, their school allowed them to sign up for AP exams at the school but did not teach for the AP exam so they brushed up on any topics that school did not cover.
Is this true of DC area schools? Will they proctor?
Students at privates without APs can sign up to take the tests at several MoCo publics or Basis in VA and pay for them.
This approach seems like a waste of time TBH. There seem to be two threads on this now, but AP count doesn’t directly correlate with admissions success. This is especially true when coming from a school that doesn’t offer AP courses.
So, if your child is a private that does not teach an official AP class, but your child takes them outside of class anyway, wouldn't they be compared to other students at their school? And wouldn't some of the other students in their grade take multiple AP tests also? To me, it seems more fraught because even if your child does not have to take any AP exams (in theory), a fair number do - they're just not public with how many/which ones, unlike the public school kids.
This is correct, many students at DCs private took multiple AP exams, even though the school didn’t offer AP classes. DC took 3 AP exams, and it did require quite a bit of studying outside of school, as the school went deeper on coursework, but the AP exams are broader, with a wider range material.
Anonymous wrote:If your kid is at a top private school with no APs, admissions will be aware of this.
If your kid is at a crappy public school in West Virginia they should take any and all APs offered and if none or very few, they need to dual enroll or seek out online learning opportunities for AP credit.
Anonymous wrote:DC is at a school that offers few APs. This year, as a senior, he got permission from his school to take AP BC Calc and AP Chem online. The classes were fairly useless, he says, but I do believe this contributed to his receiving full Banneker Key at UMd. Looks good that he sought out more rigor than was available.
Anonymous wrote:Sidwell Friends phased out AP courses in 2023. They are moving to the Andover model of making their own version of college-level courses.
No one will penalize the Sidwell kids I'm sure for not having APs. As long as they take the hardest classes available to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the science and math APs are good to take and while both my kids attended top NYC privates, their school allowed them to sign up for AP exams at the school but did not teach for the AP exam so they brushed up on any topics that school did not cover.
Is this true of DC area schools? Will they proctor?
Students at privates without APs can sign up to take the tests at several MoCo publics or Basis in VA and pay for them.
This approach seems like a waste of time TBH. There seem to be two threads on this now, but AP count doesn’t directly correlate with admissions success. This is especially true when coming from a school that doesn’t offer AP courses.
So, if your child is a private that does not teach an official AP class, but your child takes them outside of class anyway, wouldn't they be compared to other students at their school? And wouldn't some of the other students in their grade take multiple AP tests also? To me, it seems more fraught because even if your child does not have to take any AP exams (in theory), a fair number do - they're just not public with how many/which ones, unlike the public school kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sidwell doesn't have any APs and their admissions are arguably the best in the DMV this year. Some kids will take a dozen AP exams after just taking the regular classes.
STA offers APs in math, science and foreign language. My son took additional AP exams in English language, English Literature and US history after taking the regular on-level classes in these subjects. Received a 5 on all.
Can you link to the matriculation list?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the science and math APs are good to take and while both my kids attended top NYC privates, their school allowed them to sign up for AP exams at the school but did not teach for the AP exam so they brushed up on any topics that school did not cover.
Is this true of DC area schools? Will they proctor?
Students at privates without APs can sign up to take the tests at several MoCo publics or Basis in VA and pay for them.
This approach seems like a waste of time TBH. There seem to be two threads on this now, but AP count doesn’t directly correlate with admissions success. This is especially true when coming from a school that doesn’t offer AP courses.