Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The private college counselor thing is very interesting to me. we are in an okay but not great school district, with not many kids at all going to selective schools, although the valedictorian did go to Harvard last year. I'm really concerned that the guidance counselors will be completely clueless about what it takes to get into these schools, and put my kid in a worse position in many ways because they may be totally ignorant when it comes to applying at that level. Food for thought, thanks.
2020 was not a normal year. Every senior I know (20+) was accepted to a MUCH better school than they would have been, any other year - about two tiers higher than they would have been, had it not been 2020.
Do you mean class of 2020? What about ED and EA with decisions before 3/1? What made it different since the pandemic hadn't come to town yet?
Plenty of students took a gap year, so the colleges had to scramble to fill the spots. Many students took the spot, but at half workload, because they couldn't justify paying full price for remote. Colleges are bleeding money right now. The class of 2020 HS grads may have been whining about missing prom/graduation/ceremonies, but they were given slots at colleges they would not have been given any other year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:21:47 thank you for your frank advice.
Great advice!
can you start filling out the common app before August of senior year? I didn't realize that.
Anonymous wrote:21:47 thank you for your frank advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The private college counselor thing is very interesting to me. we are in an okay but not great school district, with not many kids at all going to selective schools, although the valedictorian did go to Harvard last year. I'm really concerned that the guidance counselors will be completely clueless about what it takes to get into these schools, and put my kid in a worse position in many ways because they may be totally ignorant when it comes to applying at that level. Food for thought, thanks.
2020 was not a normal year. Every senior I know (20+) was accepted to a MUCH better school than they would have been, any other year - about two tiers higher than they would have been, had it not been 2020.
Do you mean class of 2020? What about ED and EA with decisions before 3/1? What made it different since the pandemic hadn't come to town yet?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:@21:47 Did your 3 kids want to do all that every single day? I got stressed reading it.
Of course not. They are kids. Often they will do the minimum school work that they can get away with. During DL, their video gaming goes on till midnight. If only the video games could be APs!!
When a student takes an AP course in school they are working for two kinds of scores - the grade in the class (GPA) and the AP exam score. Usually, AP teachers will give them some kind of daily homework, quiz, test etc (and nowadays they are telling them to also use the online AP college Board videos.) Theoretically taking the AP class automatically preps them for the tests in May. Mostly my kids were lucky to get good AP teachers but sometimes they have got not that great AP teachers and then they had to rely on some other resources - either I taught them or I hired tutors for them.
1/2 hour of daily homework per AP subject is sort of standard for many kids. It is smart of parents and students to have an idea what the time committment is when they sign up for APs, and then adjust other activities accordingly.
As parents we were quite uninformed during my eldest kid's HS years and so we were always scrambling to do things at the last minute. We learned a lot of lessons with DC1 and then we were able to be smarter about timelines etc with the younger kids, so there is now relatively little stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:@21:47 Did your 3 kids want to do all that every single day? I got stressed reading it.
Of course not. They are kids. Often they will do the minimum school work that they can get away with. During DL, their video gaming goes on till midnight. If only the video games could be APs!!
When a student takes an AP course in school they are working for two kinds of scores - the grade in the class (GPA) and the AP exam score. Usually, AP teachers will give them some kind of daily homework, quiz, test etc (and nowadays they are telling them to also use the online AP college Board videos.) Theoretically taking the AP class automatically preps them for the tests in May. Mostly my kids were lucky to get good AP teachers but sometimes they have got not that great AP teachers and then they had to rely on some other resources - either I taught them or I hired tutors for them.
1/2 hour of daily homework per AP subject is sort of standard for many kids. It is smart of parents and students to have an idea what the time committment is when they sign up for APs, and then adjust other activities accordingly.
As parents we were quite uninformed during my eldest kid's HS years and so we were always scrambling to do things at the last minute. We learned a lot of lessons with DC1 and then we were able to be smarter about timelines etc with the younger kids, so there is now relatively little stress.
This is the thing. I know what needs to be done, and I was the type of student to do it. Straight A's in HS, multiple degrees, loved the idea of challenging myself. My HS DC, OTOH, doesn't study much, does the bare minimum, frequently doesn't hand stuff in on time, doesn't care about grades, and refuses to do any standardized test prep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:@21:47 Did your 3 kids want to do all that every single day? I got stressed reading it.
Of course not. They are kids. Often they will do the minimum school work that they can get away with. During DL, their video gaming goes on till midnight. If only the video games could be APs!!
When a student takes an AP course in school they are working for two kinds of scores - the grade in the class (GPA) and the AP exam score. Usually, AP teachers will give them some kind of daily homework, quiz, test etc (and nowadays they are telling them to also use the online AP college Board videos.) Theoretically taking the AP class automatically preps them for the tests in May. Mostly my kids were lucky to get good AP teachers but sometimes they have got not that great AP teachers and then they had to rely on some other resources - either I taught them or I hired tutors for them.
1/2 hour of daily homework per AP subject is sort of standard for many kids. It is smart of parents and students to have an idea what the time committment is when they sign up for APs, and then adjust other activities accordingly.
As parents we were quite uninformed during my eldest kid's HS years and so we were always scrambling to do things at the last minute. We learned a lot of lessons with DC1 and then we were able to be smarter about timelines etc with the younger kids, so there is now relatively little stress.
This is the thing. I know what needs to be done, and I was the type of student to do it. Straight A's in HS, multiple degrees, loved the idea of challenging myself. My HS DC, OTOH, doesn't study much, does the bare minimum, frequently doesn't hand stuff in on time, doesn't care about grades, and refuses to do any standardized test prep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tiger parent alert ^^^
No, no. I am a wannabe Tiger parent. With 3 boys, OMG, it is like herding cats.
I envy the parents who get no push backs from their obedient kids. I seriously do.
Anonymous wrote:Tiger parent alert ^^^
Anonymous wrote:@21:47 Did your 3 kids want to do all that every single day? I got stressed reading it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son’s school did not explain SAT subject tests until spring of junior year, and it was too late by then. He should have taken SAT Subject Test for Bio after taking Honors Bio. I learned a lot from my friend, whose sons were at Georgetown Prep. They have excellent college counseling there. When I heard her son was taking SAT Subject Tests, I wondered why my kid and I knew nothing about them. If you are going to apply to a top 50 school, plan on taking them.
They’re no longer offered by the College Board.