I won’t rehash the excellent points that others have made regarding APs other than to point out the “opportunity cost” of taking on more than you need to academically in your senior year.
Yes, for the reasons others have cited (long hours working on pre-screens, travel for auditions, etc.).
But also for the “cost” in terms of how your kid MIGHT have otherwise spent those AP homework hours.
For example, my D has been doing a pre-college jazz program at an NYC based conservatory every Saturday for the past two years. It not only eats up half her weekend, it generates more homework (in theory, ear training and transcriptions) than any of her high school classes.
She also participates in a weekly Jazz clinic for 3 hours every Wednesday doing more theory, composition, and improvisation with a combo of other motivated high school students. She’s done this for the past 4 years.
And having watched her development over that time and the time commitments of her few senior year APs (Music Theory, Environmental Science), I can safely assert two things:
- She never could have done her pre-college jazz program and clinic AND more AP classes
- She is a much, much better player this year as a result of how she chose to spend her time
So that’s the other factor I think that needs to be considered. If you are trying to get into a really competitive BM program, you have to find a way to assess/calibrate and decide whether any spare hour you have in a week should go into academics or into building performance skills. And you have to figure this out somewhere during junior year.
If a student can confidently say as a junior that they are at the top of their game when it comes to their instrument already, with only modest room for improvement, than sure, loading up with APs to build additional differentiation makes sense. But if you don’t know that, or suspect you are in the middle of the pack when it comes to playing, you have a tougher call to make. Betting that one can make up for average (by elite BM standards) playing with a superior academic record could be a risky bet (i think).
Of course as others have said, depends on the school. USC and UM are both on my D’s list. And if she didn’t have GPA/ACT that were “in range” I’d likely have a different POV about where she spent her time this year. But if she is fortunate enough to get accepted into either of those schools I’m certain that it will be because of her playing, not her academics.