American (AP) müfredatı hakkında bilmeniz gerekenler
The American high school curriculum is the most flexible of the major international tracks. Unlike IB (fixed 6-subject diploma) or A-Levels (fixed 3-4 subject specialization), American high school is a credit-based system: students take 4-6 academic subjects per year (English, Math, Science, Social Studies, World Language, plus electives) and can layer Advanced Placement (AP) courses on top of any subject the school offers. A typical strong American student takes 6-12 AP courses across 4 years of high school; the most ambitious take 15+.
Advanced Placement (AP) is the qualification universities care about. AP courses are college-level subject programs administered by the College Board, ending in standardized exams scored 1-5. A score of 5 is comparable to an A in A-Levels; 4 is comparable to a strong B. Top US universities admit on the basis of GPA + AP exam scores + SAT/ACT + extracurriculars + essays; the AP scores are one signal among many. International universities increasingly accept AP — Oxbridge, Imperial, McGill all publish AP-equivalent admission requirements; 5s in 4-5 AP exams is competitive at Oxbridge for science subjects.
GPA and class rank matter at US universities in a way that doesn't transfer to UK or IB systems. American transcripts report a weighted GPA (typically 4.0 unweighted, with AP courses weighted to 5.0) and sometimes class rank. Universities use both as proxies for academic performance over 4 years — not just the final exam. This rewards students who perform consistently across all subjects, not just final exams. It also means international students transferring into American high school mid-stream sometimes find their pre-American grades hard to convert.
The breadth-flexibility tradeoff: American high school students study English, Math, Science, Social Studies, and a foreign language in some form for all 4 years. This is broader than A-Levels (3 subjects) but more sequential and externally structured than IB. The flexibility comes from electives — Computer Science, Robotics, Studio Art, Music Theory, Psychology, Economics — and from when students choose to start AP-level work. A strong student can start AP in Year 10 or wait until Year 12; flexibility that doesn't exist in IB.
Sport and extracurricular weight is significant. American universities admit on a holistic profile that includes athletic recruiting, community service, leadership, arts, and research. American high schools are structured to support all of these — most students do 2-3 sports per year, hold leadership roles in clubs, and complete community service hours as part of graduation requirements. This is the genuine reason the American system is the best feeder into US universities for international students: the holistic application format matches what American high schools produce.
Where American shines: students targeting US universities, athletic recruits aiming at NCAA Division I/III, students who want maximum subject flexibility, and students who'd benefit from a more pastoral / less exam-driven academic culture. Where it struggles: students applying back to UK universities (American transcripts are accepted but A-Levels are still the smoother bet for Oxbridge), students who need external exam structure to focus, and late-arriving international students who haven't done elementary years of American-style continuous-assessment schooling.
"American high school isn't a curriculum — it's a portfolio. If your child loves having 12 things on their plate and excelling at most of them, American boarding will fit them like a glove. If they need fewer things to focus on, choose A-Levels."
— Dilek Yılmaz · Co-founder & Director



