It's not boring but it's available during the summer and frees up space for higher level math and science. Someone else mentioned PE which isn't a bad idea but my kid enjoys having that break in the middle of their day |
My son is taking the Econ and personal finance course as pass/fail. You complete the course at your own pace. I know a girl who was able to finish the course in three days. |
Geometry is fine. If you really want that extra year, you can accelerate math this summer and take the first semester of pre calc freshmen year, you have to take the second semester of pre calc next summer to really get the benefit of that extra year. Once again, geometry is fine. Unless your kid is a hard core math kid that wants to take concrete mat, number theory, etc. it's not necessary. If they are engineer/cs type, they are fine with geometry in 8th grade. Math is no joke here, accelerate at your own risk. |
Spanish is unreasonably hard at TJ. If you switch to German, you are starting over but that is better than sticking with Spanish unless they start letting people take AP Spanish over the summer |
They are clubs but in many clubs, spaces are limited. |
I don't know your daughter's comfort level with Spanish but the complaint about the Spanish department rigor are legit. |
That seems like it should be enough to handle the Spanish at TJ. |
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DD hasn’t done “9th period” ever. I think that would be tough for kids that do sports or other time consuming ECs. But about everyone does summer classes. DD did both PEs over the summer then the Personal Econ one and the extra SS course in summer too. Junior year summer she’s saving for applications and an internship |
Some colleges require 4 years of language. That's why I suggest you consider switching if you are taking Spanish. Getting 4 years of Spanish at TJ can be brutal. |
All TJ parents/accepted students should read this post on graduation requirements, it is very thorough:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1271395.page |
Students from Spanish immersion programs, like APS', have done fine in Spanish at TJ. I know of two juniors from the APS program who find the program challenging but very do-able. They are in Spanish honor society, etc. I suspect that middle schools that have IB language programs might also have students who do fine in Spanish. |
To be fair, the top Spanish students coming out of APS's immersion, if they stay in APS, are tracked into AP Spanish freshman year, with the rest in AP Spanish as sophomores. Do you know when they took AP Spanish at TJ? |
+1 |
My kid is not in band but from what I can tell the band group is pretty tight |