Anonymous wrote:My college professor sibling in a science field said that the students who struggle the most in her class are the ones who received AP credit for the intro level course and were able to skip it and go directly to her course. The material they learned and receiving a 4 or 5 on the test is NOT equal to the depth of the material taught in the level 101 course according to her. She strongly advised against taking APs for credit and did the same for her kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know several kids who went to university as sophomores with AP credit and found they weren't at all prepared. It stunned them and started college off on a bad note. Just be aware.
+1. I know a student who went to college with 9 APs. He thought of himself as some kid of genius. Now he is barely averaging a 3.0.
It happens. Especially in intensive majors like engineering. Use AP credits for general ed requirements, but beware and get advice on skipping out on core classes. If aiming for MED school, MED school geernslky don’t take AP credit - just an FYI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know several kids who went to university as sophomores with AP credit and found they weren't at all prepared. It stunned them and started college off on a bad note. Just be aware.
+1. I know a student who went to college with 9 APs. He thought of himself as some kid of genius. Now he is barely averaging a 3.0.
Anonymous wrote:I know several kids who went to university as sophomores with AP credit and found they weren't at all prepared. It stunned them and started college off on a bad note. Just be aware.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you all seen the statistics on AP testing results? ABYSMAL. We are talking only 5-9% getting a 5 and that is with a curve.
I am not sure the point of AP classes in high school. High school teachers can not teach them like college professors and the kids don’t have the time to digest them.
Public’s really need to start follow private school lead and offer advanced honors courses that prepare the kids for college courses, not try to cram a college course in from Aug to April and having kids take multiple AP tests and missing other classes during school time to do it. It is just way too chaotic to have juniors taking SAT or ACT, SAT subject tests, AP finals, other finals, and term papers all in the span of 1-2 months. These kids aren’t LEARNING anything. It is anxiety induced memorization.
Huh? The kids usually get nearly two semesters (most of a school year) to digest AP material. They will never have such a long time to learn material again. Once they hit college they will have half the time to learn just as much material. 1 semester, not 2 semesters.
AP is a good way to get a basic intro level into college. It's a great way to learn study skills and test preparation at a slower pace. Once the hit college that pace picks up.
Anonymous wrote:Have you all seen the statistics on AP testing results? ABYSMAL. We are talking only 5-9% getting a 5 and that is with a curve.
I am not sure the point of AP classes in high school. High school teachers can not teach them like college professors and the kids don’t have the time to digest them.
Public’s really need to start follow private school lead and offer advanced honors courses that prepare the kids for college courses, not try to cram a college course in from Aug to April and having kids take multiple AP tests and missing other classes during school time to do it. It is just way too chaotic to have juniors taking SAT or ACT, SAT subject tests, AP finals, other finals, and term papers all in the span of 1-2 months. These kids aren’t LEARNING anything. It is anxiety induced memorization.
Anonymous wrote:Have you all seen the statistics on AP testing results? ABYSMAL. We are talking only 5-9% getting a 5 and that is with a curve.
I am not sure the point of AP classes in high school. High school teachers can not teach them like college professors and the kids don’t have the time to digest them.
Public’s really need to start follow private school lead and offer advanced honors courses that prepare the kids for college courses, not try to cram a college course in from Aug to April and having kids take multiple AP tests and missing other classes during school time to do it. It is just way too chaotic to have juniors taking SAT or ACT, SAT subject tests, AP finals, other finals, and term papers all in the span of 1-2 months. These kids aren’t LEARNING anything. It is anxiety induced memorization.