<p>I attend an Ib school currently (I already got a 5 on geography ap), but I have to change schools to an AP magnet school
my current schedule Is
tok
French abintio
math sl 1
hist of the Americas hl
English hl
biology hl
psych sl
(all Ib)
At the end of this year I am planning to take ap equivalent tests so that I can get credit for these classes before I leave (and chemistry self studied)
biology ap test, psych ap test, chem ap, ap lang</p>
<p>next year at this magnet school I will take
ap calc bc
adv calc hon
ap computer science
ap phys c
English hon 4
ap econ micro
ap environmental </p>
<p>what might this look like to college admissions officers?</p>
<p>What’s your reason for switching? I would imagine that an admissions officer would look really differently on someone who dropped out of IB for reasons outside of their control (e.g. your parents moved due to their job, or they experienced a financial crisis and pulled you out of private school, or your district redistricted and you were no longer allowed to attend the previous school, and there wasn’t an IB option available to you in the new school or location), vs. someone who simply didn’t like IB or found it too hard.</p>
<p>Just conjecture though.</p>
<p>Ib is far less fruitful credit wise. The school that I go to with ib is far lower ranked and far less competitive. I hate ib, its actually easy at my school (which makes me concerned), but I still hate how liberal artsy it is. It is a sheer preference change. Would the colleges really know if the cause was preference or inevitable?</p>