Quote:
Originally Posted by Alex Stroup
Then you're experience was the opposite of mine. Six AP classes, six passed AP tests and not one a particularly useful educational experience.
They were better in the sciences but the humanities one were just awful.
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Are you kidding? Thanks to my AP English experience, I refined my BS skills to such a fine degree that I was able to show up to my first college humanities final an hour late, finish on time, and still receive a near perfect score. And even in the technical world, those same BS skills allow me to churn out plans, reports, proposals, etc. with no effort but better results than 99% of my coworkers (one manager tried to get our whole department to adopt the format from a report I threw together in an hour).
Best life skill I ever learned. Though I suppose that started in elementary school. It seems that through my whole educational career I had teachers that stressed the importance of being able to synthesize thoughts and data into an organized format.
So while I learned next to nothing about the books I read in AP English, I definitely considered it a worthwhile experience.
Of course, I also took 14 AP exams, so I'm a little crazy.