Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take the Calc class, as some schools will require that at a minimum attainment level.
What schools REQUIRE calculus for a non-stem kid?
I think they mean it is what will be more likely to get you accepted to a top 30 school. This really depends on what school you are applying to, the likely major interested in and what other parts of the application exist. If the child is applying as an english major to williams or iowa or BU, ( i chose these at random) if they have a lot of experiences that show their passion in english/writing and don't take calc I dont think it will hurt their chances. If they are applying to princeton than maybe it would? I don't even know if it would matter then either if the rest of the application and grades were exceptional.
I am mind blown that there are a lot of kids from this area that aren’t taking calc. It’s required at our all girls private (students must take either regular calc, or AB or BC to graduate). I would think not taking it, if offered, would hurt in the rigor category regardless of future major.
You are very out of touch with the real world. "on grade level" is taking pre-calculus senior year. I suspect more than 50% of HS students do not take calculus at any level.
We know that’s true because only about half of US high schools even offer calculus. But they do around here so it still seems for greatest level of rigor, you need to take calculus, if offered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take the Calc class, as some schools will require that at a minimum attainment level.
What schools REQUIRE calculus for a non-stem kid?
I think they mean it is what will be more likely to get you accepted to a top 30 school. This really depends on what school you are applying to, the likely major interested in and what other parts of the application exist. If the child is applying as an english major to williams or iowa or BU, ( i chose these at random) if they have a lot of experiences that show their passion in english/writing and don't take calc I dont think it will hurt their chances. If they are applying to princeton than maybe it would? I don't even know if it would matter then either if the rest of the application and grades were exceptional.
I am mind blown that there are a lot of kids from this area that aren’t taking calc. It’s required at our all girls private (students must take either regular calc, or AB or BC to graduate). I would think not taking it, if offered, would hurt in the rigor category regardless of future major.
You are very out of touch with the real world. "on grade level" is taking pre-calculus senior year. I suspect more than 50% of HS students do not take calculus at any level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take the Calc class, as some schools will require that at a minimum attainment level.
What schools REQUIRE calculus for a non-stem kid?
I think they mean it is what will be more likely to get you accepted to a top 30 school. This really depends on what school you are applying to, the likely major interested in and what other parts of the application exist. If the child is applying as an english major to williams or iowa or BU, ( i chose these at random) if they have a lot of experiences that show their passion in english/writing and don't take calc I dont think it will hurt their chances. If they are applying to princeton than maybe it would? I don't even know if it would matter then either if the rest of the application and grades were exceptional.
I am mind blown that there are a lot of kids from this area that aren’t taking calc. It’s required at our all girls private (students must take either regular calc, or AB or BC to graduate). I would think not taking it, if offered, would hurt in the rigor category regardless of future major.
Anonymous wrote:Where do they want to go? My kid who did not take ANY Calculus in HS but took AP Stats and Stats seminar still got into a good Data Science program with merit - but DC wasn't interested in Ivies or Top 50 USNWR. DC will still have to take Calc in college for major but it didn't prevent them from getting in. It was also helpful that they weren't stressing about Calc during Junior year when they were also taking a full load of other AP classes. FWIW, the kid thought they were going to be liberal arts until they took AP Stats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just take what you want. Have seen so many kids try to game the system, take courses they do not want to take, and then they don’t get into their reaches anyway. What’s the takeaway? That life is about making choices that matter to you, or that life is all about trying to get into certain colleges? Which group do you think deals better with rejection and setbacks?
I don’t know about you, but I want my kid to be prepared for college. Course selection does impact that.
A kid who is described as non-STEM and planning a social studies major is highly unlikely to need to take calculus in college. Maybe some courses to fulfill a quantitative requirement but there are usually lots of ways to do this that don't involve calculus. AP stats would be more relevant and more interesting.
Disagree, it was required at my T10 for 90 percent of majors.
I spot checked a couple Ivys to see if government majors would need calculus for any requirements. I didn’t see any. Looks like a stats-type course is typically required either generally or for the major specifically. I think it was Princeton’s that specifically said no math beyond high school algebra needed.
I would expect this sort of math requirement to be listed as part of the general distribution requirements, not necessarily under the major... Clearly some majors will also have math requirements that go beyond...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take the Calc class, as some schools will require that at a minimum attainment level.
What schools REQUIRE calculus for a non-stem kid?
I think they mean it is what will be more likely to get you accepted to a top 30 school. This really depends on what school you are applying to, the likely major interested in and what other parts of the application exist. If the child is applying as an english major to williams or iowa or BU, ( i chose these at random) if they have a lot of experiences that show their passion in english/writing and don't take calc I dont think it will hurt their chances. If they are applying to princeton than maybe it would? I don't even know if it would matter then either if the rest of the application and grades were exceptional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just take what you want. Have seen so many kids try to game the system, take courses they do not want to take, and then they don’t get into their reaches anyway. What’s the takeaway? That life is about making choices that matter to you, or that life is all about trying to get into certain colleges? Which group do you think deals better with rejection and setbacks?
I don’t know about you, but I want my kid to be prepared for college. Course selection does impact that.
A kid who is described as non-STEM and planning a social studies major is highly unlikely to need to take calculus in college. Maybe some courses to fulfill a quantitative requirement but there are usually lots of ways to do this that don't involve calculus. AP stats would be more relevant and more interesting.
Disagree, it was required at my T10 for 90 percent of majors.
I spot checked a couple Ivys to see if government majors would need calculus for any requirements. I didn’t see any. Looks like a stats-type course is typically required either generally or for the major specifically. I think it was Princeton’s that specifically said no math beyond high school algebra needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take the Calc class, as some schools will require that at a minimum attainment level.
What schools REQUIRE calculus for a non-stem kid?
Anonymous wrote:Getting back to original question, when people say take calculus in high school, do they mean AP Calc (either) or is calculus with applications (or equivalent non-AP calc) adequate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you suspect your kid is going to have to take calculus in college, strongly recommend they take it first in high school. College classes tend to be very large lectures and move fast. It really helps to have some foundation with the subject.
+1
I was a strong math student who missed the track to Calc in high school, due to changing districts. My parents and I didn't know enough to push for it. I took calc in college 25 years ago and even then about half the class had taken calc in high school. For classes graded on a curve (is that still the case?), it was a huge disadvantage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take the Calc class, as some schools will require that at a minimum attainment level.
What schools REQUIRE calculus for a non-stem kid?
I think they mean it is what will be more likely to get you accepted to a top 30 school. This really depends on what school you are applying to, the likely major interested in and what other parts of the application exist. If the child is applying as an english major to williams or iowa or BU, ( i chose these at random) if they have a lot of experiences that show their passion in english/writing and don't take calc I dont think it will hurt their chances. If they are applying to princeton than maybe it would? I don't even know if it would matter then either if the rest of the application and grades were exceptional.
This is highly school-dependent. As I posted upthread, Wesleyan promotes the fact that 86% of admitted students have taken calc. I would not have assumed that wesleyan has a strong preference for calc, but clearly they do. Research the schools your kid is interested in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take the Calc class, as some schools will require that at a minimum attainment level.
What schools REQUIRE calculus for a non-stem kid?
I think they mean it is what will be more likely to get you accepted to a top 30 school. This really depends on what school you are applying to, the likely major interested in and what other parts of the application exist. If the child is applying as an english major to williams or iowa or BU, ( i chose these at random) if they have a lot of experiences that show their passion in english/writing and don't take calc I dont think it will hurt their chances. If they are applying to princeton than maybe it would? I don't even know if it would matter then either if the rest of the application and grades were exceptional.