Monthly Archives: April 2011

Audio Visual Study Resources

While most learning is from reading, that is not everyone’s best method for input.  Try searching one of these sites for your audio/visual learner:

A favorite: http://www.khanacademy.org/

http://videolibrary.intelecomstore.org/index.php?option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=1
Search iTunesU for video and audio podcasts

Annenberg Media offers Video on Demand courses in science, foreign language, literature, art, etc. that have been aired on public television (broadband required).

http://www.montereyinstitute.org/nroc/ a growing library of high-quality online course content for students and faculty in higher education, high school and Advanced Placement*.

Documentary Videos offers high quality drama and non-fiction programming for purchase. It has all aired on public television or the many cable TV documentary channels.

Exploratorium Webcast Archive: use MediaPlayer or RealPlayer to view video on scientific topics

Netflix movie rental club; PBS and other documentaries, Standard Deviants, a few Teaching Company high school courses, in addition to entertainment.

PBS is a source of educational videos for purchase.

TED offers “riveting talks by remarkable people, free to the world”

United Streaming from Discovery Education integrates seamlessly into any curriculum with 8,700 full-length videos segmented into 80,000 content-specific clips tied directly state and national standards. Get this at a huge discount here https://www.homeschoolbuyersco-op.org/discovery-education-streaming-plus/ .

http://www.openculture.com/intelligentvideo

Difference Between AP and CLEP?

Originally posted at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ClepForHomeschool/message/16145 by Ed R.  (reposted with permission)

The two products (AP and CLEP) are developed by the same people contracted by the same company.  That is the same people who make up a US History CLEP test will also make up the AP US History test.

Differences:

AP tests are a high school product.  It is designed for high school students ONLY, performing at a “college level” (I put it in parentheses because the bar has slid lower through the years – no fault to College Board).  The AP class has to be taught by an AP certified teacher in order for us (home-schoolers) to put on the transcripts that our child has taken an AP class (whether they take the exam or not and whether they pass the exam or not).  You do not have to take an AP class to take an AP exam.  Only high school students can take these exams – that is once a high school diploma is in hand – you can no longer get AP exam credits.  I think the advertised number is over 3200 colleges and universities accept AP credits.

CLEP tests were designed for adults returning to college to complete a degree or start a degree after they have been out of high school for awhile – where they may already have expertise in  particular subjects.  The CLEP tests are supposed to be for adult college level students.  Colleges who have returning adults to college type programs (usually accelerated degree programs) most frequently accept these exams for credit.  High school students can take these tests (anyone can), college students can take these tests – basically anyone can take these tests and apply them to a degree at over 2900 colleges & universities in the US (there are around 4000 total colleges & universities in the whole US).

The rigor of each exam is kept similar – the primary key difference is one is an adult college student product and one is strictly a high school student product.  As far as gravitas or acceptance – again both are similar.  My experience (anecdotal, not totally scientific here – just dealing with the schools I have investigated) – most schools accept both.  The ones that will only take the AP credits basically are looking for your money (my opinion).  There is an appearance of exclusivity however they want your money for the class if you have not already taken the AP exam and they do not want to give the student any (less expensive) other opportunity to achieve that credit if they have not already done so.  I am not being totally fair to the colleges & universities who have no accelerated degree type programs here (painting with a broad brush) – certain colleges are just set up to handle incoming freshman from high school and do not cater to adult students (no evening classes, limited on-line classes, limited geographic access, etc).

There is another College Board product that gets little mention as well and that is the SAT II exams (again all made up by the same personnel contracted by “The College Board”).  Some colleges use the SAT II to place students at various class levels for their freshman classes and some colleges will give the students credit for lower level classes if they score at certain levels on the SAT II specific subject tests.  The SAT IIs are a college product used primarily by colleges.  Their acceptance of class credit for various scores is similar to the AP & CLEP and that is strictly at the discretion of the college or university.  A few colleges will require SAT II exams prior to admittance.

And there is the original SAT test – which again I have found certain colleges will give you credit for certain freshman level classes if you score at various levels on that test for various sections.  The basic credit by examination ( CBE ) rule applies here for all of these – “every college & university is different and every program at every college & university is different” (similarly for the ACT exam).

I hope this helps, God Bless, Ed R.

Career Tests: worth their weight in gold

What do I want to be when I grow up?

Students: adults twice your age are asking this question!  However, the question should be: What am I best suited for?  Many adults have not answered this question either.  The kicker is, many of us are not even ASKING the question — What am I best suited for? – we are simply trying to choose a direction in life/job/career without taking time to find this out.

True Story: My 23-year-old niece spent 4-years attending a fabulously-expensive 4-year private college and got a wonderful education in Biology with an emphasis in Research.  She was excited to be selected for a job interning in a highly-selective research lab studying mosquitoes (they live in Georgia).  After one-month in this high-paying job, she was about to go stir-crazy.  She was adequately trained for the position, it was close to home, paid well … but she failed to take into account she is a “people person”.  There were some days that her entire shift would pass and she would not see or speak to one other person.  Death to an extrovert.  She left the job within a month and is planning on graduate school to move her career in a different direction within the field of Biology.

Could her path been a bit clearer and straighter?  Maybe!

I recommend all students 7th grade and above take an online career assessment and even a personality test.  In fact, I recommend they take at least three since questions can be phrased differently and different answers might sway the results.   Besides being fun, they really are insightful.  It may help you choose a career direction or help you decide if you should pursue an internship, job shadow or take college courses in some areas you haven’t thought of.