Sunday, August 2, 2020

Passing Out

Passing Out [Editors note in 2017: The Office of Undergraduate Advising and Academic Programming manages credit policies for incoming freshmen, and the policies are subject to change for each entering class. Please refer to this page for up-to-date information on AP and transfer credit.] Remember when you were in kindergarten, and the first day of class your mother came with you and held your hand? Eventually she left, like when she stopped holding the bike and you rode it all by yourself (or fell down and cried like you didnt see THAT one coming), but its still nice to have your security blanket there. So I became a legal adult a few months ago. Who says legal adults dont need to feel secure sometimes? (Also, all you did on the first day of kindergarten was color. Heck, all we did on the first day of high school was get that permission slip signed saying we understood that cheating is bad and to bring a certain type of binder with dividers for Homework, Tests, and Unnecessary Permission Slips. Today, were learning.) Last week I met with my advisor and signed up for classes, which was interesting, since I nearly forgot that among all the crazy events and crazy amounts of free food, were actually here for school. Im taking 8.01 (Physics), 5.111 (Principles of Chemical Science), possibly Shakespeare as my humanities class, and 18.02 (Calculus). Calculus is the only class in which Im not starting at the very bottom, since I passed out of 18.01 with a 5 on the AP Calculus BC exam. My high school was pretty heavy on AP classes, with something like 28 different AP classes and exams offered, but I didnt have any idea where I was applying for college when I took most of them (much like I have no idea what Im doing with my life), so I took AP Chemistry and two years of AP Computer Science neither of which are accepted for credit at MIT. And Im fairly sure the amount of AP credit you have that applies to MIT isnt even really considered in admissions (I didnt even send in my scores until this summer); it just allows you to take harder classes. (Who DOES that?) So if you have a 5 on AP Calculus BC exam, you can place out of 18.01 and take 18.02, 18.022, 18.023, 18.024, or 18.02A. If you want to review, you can still take 18.01, or 18.01A, which reviews 18.01 in just six weeks. If you have a 5 on AP Biology, you place out of 7.012/7.013/7.014 (all variations on the same class) and can go ahead and take 7.02 or 7.03. If you dont have AP classes or exams offered at your schools, but have taken an equivalent class, dont freak out. Study a little over the summer, bring your notes to school, and you can take the advanced standing exam for calculus, chemistry, biology, or physics. You may be tempted to say, Thats so much cheaper/better for me since Im a huge procrastinator! (AP exams were $95 when I left high school, and rising. I spent more on AP exams than I ever did at prom, or, yknow, in my life.) This might work out for you, or it might not. But it IS much easier to take the AP exam when its fresh in your mind. For some exams, AP credit isnt given because it doesnt sufficiently cover what an MIT class would chemistry, for example. Getting a 5 on the AP exam is not the same as passing the advanced standing exam, which is notoriously difficult. But it can be done. If you have a 5 on one of the AP English exams, or pass the Freshman Essay Evaluation (FEE), you win! Your prize is taking any communication-intensive class you want! If you dont, no worries; there are just fewer humanities classes youre allowed to take. If you have a 5 on both, you can get 9 units of elective credit for one of the exams. 9 units of elective credit is awarded for most of the advanced placement humanities, which just helps you free time to take more classes that could help you figure out your major. There is a small list of exams that are not awarded with credit three of which I took in high school. (Yeah, Im awesome.) Receiving AP credit is explained much better here, and you can check out all classes at MIT on the MIT Course Catalogue. You can also check out this page for receiving credit for college courses, which is generally evaluated the same as if you were a transfer student. But really, if youre applying to MIT while taking AP Statistics, AP Studio Art and AP Environmental Science, dont even sweat it. It never hurts to know how to do a chi-square test (or to forget it, either. Sorry, Mr. Lindberg). The important thing is youre challenging yourself while having a great senior year. Because in a short while, youll be just as lost and confused as I am. How sad for you. Seriously, though, I AM the youngest blogger, and its been a very short while since I was in your shoes, so please feel free to ask me questions about SATs, APs, college applications, or my horrible AP Chemistry teacher I can tell you so much more about that than about MIT classes (my first of which is at 12 today). Bring back the permission slips!

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