| You do realize that any AP class content is on college board website and available on Khan Academy should your child need to, or want to, be sure they have covered everything for AP tests. The moco HS course will continue on with the pace of the teacher. Their course grade and AP test score of two separate things so you can make sure they are prepared by working ahead should you feel it necessary. It will all be okay. |
Why do you want kids to miss school? |
If it's your position that AP kids should be fully capable of teaching with Khan Academy and College Board material themselves, then why do we have the AP classes at all? What is the point of having teachers or sending them to school if you believe the kids should teach themselves? |
this |
| Can people please shovel their sidewalks already?!!! Very few sidewalks on several lots are shovelled and a lot of kids walk to seven local elementary. |
My kid’s high school was supposed to have AP review classes tomorrow morning and Thursday morning, assuming they opened on time. Now that’s out the window, so I still have something to complain about. |
I'm sure the Mad Mommies of MoCo will be on the warpath anyway. It's what they do. They fume and they yell. |
This just isn't true. My older kid got into an Ivy without reporting AP scores (took lots of AP classes and didn't report scores). And once you are at the Ivy, AP scores really don't count for anything. My younger is in AP classes now and spent every day last week doing at least a little something on AP class prep. I didn't urge her to. I just noticed she was doing it. AP kids can keep up without a teacher actually holding class. |
| My HS only offers like 4 AP classes and we send kids to Ivies and other top colleges |
But if your school offers dozens of AP classes, you look weak if you only took 3 AP classes while other classmates took 8-12. That’s the difference. |
This is true. The kids going to top colleges from our school probably take about 12 by the end of senior year. But again, these are kids who can (and often do) study on their own without teachers lecturing to them. I agree that there's a more urgent timing issue with losing classtime with these courses. But it's also the case that these are the kids who can make it work, whether class is in session or not. |
This is true. The kids going to top colleges from our school probably take about 12 by the end of senior year. But again, these are kids who can (and often do) study on their own without teachers lecturing to them. I agree that there's a more urgent timing issue with losing classtime with these courses. But it's also the case that these are the kids who can make it work, whether class is in session or not. |
Troll. No one thinks we could close over a potential dusting of snow. |
| I strongly suspect the real reason they're doing delayed openings is so elementary school teachers don't need to deal with indoor recess. |
No they are not. Deal with it. |