| *heart damage |
| I'm not worried at all. Because this is not something to worry about. DYING is something to worry about. |
No. They have 2 hours of class each week, compared with 4.5 hours they would be having if school were normal. Also, teachers said they were told to give very little homework— 1 hour per week. So a lot less material covered. |
I have a sophomore. We were really concerned too so we used this pandemic summer for our kid to take Algebra 2 at a private school. Seeing how Geometry turned out at the end of 9th grade was very discouraging- while they did "finish" the material, the teaching was done at such a shallow level. Kid will be enrolled in Pre-calc for 10th grade and feels pretty good and ready for the public school year. We do plan to use a tutor to fill in the gaps of what he won't learn at school - which is the depth this kid wants to learn. We are also looking at selective colleges and have the SAT to plan for- even if schools go test optional, we plan to have kid take the test. |
Sorry to hear that. Check out the south or the Midwest/ west. Most schools open at least partly. |
I’m the poster above. I live in Henrico. Hanover, one of I think 10 school districts in Virginia that decided to open just had 3 middle school teachers test positive, delaying the start of school. If you think the school districts that opened are going to have everything running smoothly, I think you’re very wrong. |
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I am not a sophomore or (HS) freshman parent. But, I learned a lot parenting my (now) College Freshman through high school.
It is not to early to think about college, but it early to worry about it. As for selective colleges, that can mean different things to different people. If we are talking about Ivy or similar, it is a crap shoot for any child. If we are talking about a step down, say (as a Virginian) UVA or W&M, there it is more predictable. The problem with college applications is supply and demand. The elite schools - HYPS, etc -- get about 10-20 applications for each slot. And most of those have perfect to nearly perfect grades, test scores, recommendations, at EC's. Unless your child does something extraordinary (e.g., wins national science fair; becomes a global spokesperson for something (e..g Greta Thunurg) or similar accomplishments, those schools are probably going to reject your student. And it should not be a reflection on the student: they are selective because they can be, not because the schools are that hard. The best thing to do is understand the situation. HS is more about maturing than learning. Learning to work with others, advocating for yourself...etc. Those will be challenging this year. But, my guess is this will be over by next year. As for material: make sure they know the math. Also critical thinking (in writing/analysis). Don't worry about the grades, but make sure the work is done. If they work hard, the grades will land where they land. |
I wonder how much of that 4.5 hours was truly taught class....not a self done exercise or something that kids are now doing asynchronously. |
Contact PrepMatters in Bethesda - even if you don't work w/ them their founder is great at offering advice. My DH's son has been working with them periodically for two years and loves it |
Mine too. |
I think this is good advice. Use Khan academy now to fill in gaps in the meantime? |