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He is at grade level, but gets eqsily frustrated and tends to rush through the solutions… will this program help in ypur experience? I don’t want it to bece
A negative experience for him |
| I meant to become a negative experience |
| No this is for tigers |
I am not really sure what you are asking here but my kid has been doing RSM since 4th grade, he is in 7th now, and enjoys the class. He stopped doing the grade level material and is focused on the math competition class. RSM will reinforce what he is learning in school and probably push into more depth with what they are learning. The kids practice problems and share solutions in class. I have no idea if your kid will see it as a negative experience or not. Mine asked to take the class and chooses to continue. He had friends whose parents made then take the class and were less excited to be there. |
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The Russian School of Math in my neighborhood has 95% Asian students. We see the students waiting on the sidewalk right after school waiting to get in.
Unless he enjoys math I would skip it and accept that he is a typical math student. |
| What grade is he in? The director at my local RSM said don't bother joining after about 3rd. |
Strange, I know a lot of people whose kids started after 3rd grade. |
I thought it was a weird comment too. |
That makes sense. 4th grade is when math can get difficult. Unless RSM only wants math loving students who they train early to excel at it. |
| We started in third and glad that didn’t start earlier. But they do offer three levels per grade, and give you a placement test before you start, so I don’t think your child would have a negative experience. |
That’s sort of the sense I get. Why wouldn’t they? They want to be able to say their method works to produce x number of competition winners |
Most kids at RSM don’t participate in math competitions. The ones that do are most likely in one of the math competition classes, which you have to test into. |