“My understanding is that in order for our universities to accept a student into the sciences, they need to complete both the regular and advanced texts of Apologia’s High School courses. If someone from Canada can connfirm this or expound on this information, this would be great.”
Hi…I am in Ontario so not sure if you are hearing this as being particular to your province, or whether you are hearing it from other HS mom experiences in your province.
But I have NEVER heard this before. What I hear most is that each University has it’s own COMPLETELY unique admissions policy. It’s up to us to go, on a case by case basis, to each University website and figure out what they require. If your DS thinks he wants to take University level science, my suggestion would be to have him short list his University choices, and then study the admisission policy of each one.
Having said this, I would be shocked if any of them required jr high science or even LOOKED at any part of a junior high transcript! The transcript is really just about high school. The issue, then, is really less about what a U. “requires” and much more about whether YOU think your DS will do fine just jumping right into an Apologia High School level course.
On another note, you might also want follow up on learning about “Open Universities” which allow ANY person to enroll in a course at age 16. Of course, it’s up to you, the parent, to make sure your child is READY for it, and it’s in your interest to be sure about it because you’re going to fork over around $700 CDN for the course. But the course descriptions are extremely detailed online…it’s not too hard to see whether your child will survive in the course.
The open university option a great one, as there are no “formal requirements”. My favourite is Athabasca University, which has students from all over the world getting degrees via online courses. Many acquaintances of mine here in Ontario start their kids, at age 16 or 17, taking an Athabasca course or two. If the student is enjoying it and doing well, they keep it up until he/she has 4-6 credits.
At that point, the student can apply to ANY university as “mature student”, and in most cases ALL the credits are just transferred over. Bingo, your student is in their true school of choice – and no one ever asked him what high school courses he took! The bottom line here is that in second year University, nobody in Admissions cares what you took in high school. They just care which credits they’ll transfer over.
So, my advice is to:
a) figure out what school(s) you son wants most;
b) choose whatever Apologia courses YOU think your son needs to be ready.
And given the expertise that I know Bookworm has (above post), I’d strongly suggest you go with her suggestions to form your plan. I agree with her – I would go straight to regular, high school level courses. If he’s drowning in it, take it slow, or get a tutor until he catches up and gets used to this level of study. If science is his natural interest, he’ll be motivated, and it won’t take long before he’s used to these courses and just hammering out the work to get them done.
If you are in Ontario (or even if you are not, because many other schools are listed), I strongly suggest you check out http://www.rainsberger.ca
Sarah Rainsberger has done ALL the homeschool on homeschoolers/universities in Canada. The website is the best resource going for us.
Good luck!
Angie