Hey Disduck,
Thanks for elaborating. I have a few thoughts in response -
> I don't think AP is ever really "necessary," and I can't think of any major at any college which requires AP standing upon entry. One nice thing about AP, though, is that it will generally get you out of academic distribution requirements and free up some time to take other classes. For example, my brother goes to Tampa (and as we've discussed, in a very cool DIS coincidence, he is in the same class and dormitory as your daughter!) Greg took five AP exams @ Mountain Lakes High School, and was awarded eighteen credits by Tampa, so he technically started college as a second-semester freshman. He got out of the history, writing, and calculus requirements, so now he has time in his course schedule to take music, political science, and management, all of which interest him more.
> I can think of two other benefits to AP credit at Tampa - first, the housing lottery is weighted by credits, so my brother actually gets to pick his housing for next year before most of his classmates. He'll get a better dorm room thanks to the APs, and ...
> Second, because he started ahead, he'll be able to do his second semester of senior year as a part-time student. That'll save the family about $5000 in tuition.
At most universities, there are a lot of advantages to AP credit that stretch beyond the academic and into the administrative and financial realms. Amusingly this was not true at my college, which awards zero credit for any AP exam. Just as ead79 described, you can only use AP scores to "place into" an upper-level class, but you still have all of the same distribution requirements - for example, you might take English 220 instead of English 101, but you still have to take English. But, even though you don't get credit for them - you need AP classes to get into that college. Taking an AP class is a way of saying "I am challenging myself as hard as I can." And isn't a kid who is willing to do that somehow stronger of character for it?
Life in the elite college leagues is like a series of dominoes. APs are a way of tipping that first domino, because they help you get admitted. Once admitted, you're better prepped, and that prep knocks over the graduation domino. You graduate, you get a job, and if you're pragmatic about it, you are going to make major cash. Average starting salary among the 72% of 2004 grads at my college who went into the work force = $58,400. The other 28% went to grad school or public service. Now what kind of life do you want for a kid? Do you want the one that $58,400 buys?