Anonymous wrote:Np that wonders why so many call it quirky. My child isn’t what I’ve ever described as quirky. He is brilliant, great at sports, and very social. When people qualify it as quirky or the kids a quirky, it reminds me of the land of misfit toys. Nothing wrong with it, but that isn’t necessarily a positive either. Smart =\= quirky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private schools don't like APs because it looks really bad when their students do poorly. Raises too many questions of, "what exactly am I paying for, again?" Schools generally hate tests that allow parents to objectively compare their students to those at other schools.
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Why don't they rank their students? Why don't they publish where their students get accepted to college? Why don't they publish their average SAT scores? See above. Same reason as why they avoid AP tests.
Anonymous wrote:Np that wonders why so many call it quirky. My child isn’t what I’ve ever described as quirky. He is brilliant, great at sports, and very social. When people qualify it as quirky or the kids a quirky, it reminds me of the land of misfit toys. Nothing wrong with it, but that isn’t necessarily a positive either. Smart =\= quirky.
Anonymous wrote:+1. And the point is that there is no need for class ranking. Obviously the (good) colleges don't care or they would not put up with not ranking top to bottom.
Anonymous wrote:I guess some SAAS parents are insufferable, thin-skinned, and unable to debate a topic without getting defensive and lashing out for no good reason.
No school is perfect, nobody was putting down the school, yet only voicing concern about the high emphasis on AP’s in light of all the criticism and concern over AP focused teaching in recent years. SAAS is no more special than any other top school in the areas, so stop being so petty when others bring up topics of concern.
Anonymous wrote:They avoid the AP tests because they don't offer any advantage to the student and the teachers, particularly the good teachers, dislike/hate them. They don't "publish" exmissions to the world but do so internally and obviously the parents/students are quite happy because they keep using them. Yes, they could rank the class but why inflict something like that on the student body when it doesn't do much more than add stress.
Anonymous wrote:They avoid the AP tests because they don't offer any advantage to the student and the teachers, particularly the good teachers, dislike/hate them. They don't "publish" exmissions to the world but do so internally and obviously the parents/students are quite happy because they keep using them. Yes, they could rank the class but why inflict something like that on the student body when it doesn't do much more than add stress.
Anonymous wrote:They avoid the AP tests because they don't offer any advantage to the student and the teachers, particularly the good teachers, dislike/hate them. They don't "publish" exmissions to the world but do so internally and obviously the parents/students are quite happy because they keep using them. Yes, they could rank the class but why inflict something like that on the student body when it doesn't do much more than add stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private schools don't like APs because it looks really bad when their students do poorly. Raises too many questions of, "what exactly am I paying for, again?" Schools generally hate tests that allow parents to objectively compare their students to those at other schools.
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