My 8th grader is in Geometry. 600 on every math SOL he has ever taken. 99th percentile on IAAT. High A's every quarter in Algebra and Geometry. And has never had any outside enrichment. He just has a mathy brain. Of his 6 closest friends, all of whom are in Geometry in 8th, only one has ever done outside enrichment--he went to Mathnasium in early ES but not since 2nd or 3rd grade. DS's friends who do outside math enrichment are all in Algebra II in 8th grade, either because they did Algebra in 6th (went to the MS for 1st period) or because they took Geometry the summer between 7th and 8th. |
We're at a center and I don't think many kids we know in Advanced Math/level IV do outside enrichment. DD knows 1, with 1 more who just does a lot at home. I'm sure there are a few more, but there's not any pressure to do it. I'm guessing most pressure for things like that are self-inflicted or because you/your kid picked a specific peer group. |
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The "outside enrichment" comments are meant to diminish high achievers indicating somehow they couldn't do it on their own.
And because they are just average kids with extra support provided by their wealth and privilege, the school system shouldn't have to shoulder the burden of their self-inflicted advancement and artificial gap creation against other groups who would be just as advanced if they had the same privilege. What's pretty funny about it all, is that really smart kids are just kids with special needs, if you really think about it. But since their needs appear like a positive, they are ignored and even diminished by many critics of advanced academic curriculum/programs. |
No, not at all. But prelearning math does skew both the grading curve and the teaching style of teachers. And it has an effect on students who do not prelearn math. |
All of the bolded is acknowledged at least at the VDOE level with the guidance on gifted program requirements. |
I object, too. Please don't put a kid who scored 80% on the IAAT in AoPS. It hurts the truly gifted kids there. Put them in Kumon or another remedial program, not in a gifted program. |
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Can my daughter ask for an end course test for math 7 Honor at middle school just before 7th grade beginning?
If she passed the math 7 honor test, can she don't need to take the math 7 honor in 7th grade , and can take Algebra 1 honor in 7th grade at an AAP center middle school? |
Yes. It's called the SOL. She will take it, she doesn't need to ask. |
The SOL is Math 7. Math 7 HN is really, Math 8. OP, if your kid was close on the IAAT and pass advances the Math 7 SOL, you can probably still get her in. Talk to her current math teacher and see what he or she thinks. If she was not close on the Iowa, she probably should take Math 7 Honors. |
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Why is there even a tangent about whether calculus is necessary? If OP's kid takes M7H, , she would still be on track for calculus in 12th grade.
OP, if your DD knocks the SOL out of the park and has the support of her current math teacher, then you can contact the middle school and request Algebra placement. If she barely gets pass advanced on the SOL, M7H would be a much more appropriate placement. |
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^ Forgot to add:
FCPS is very rigid about gatekeeping the math, but principals have some wiggle room. There isn't some additional placement test that FCPS would be willing to use. The principal of the MS may let your kid take Algebra, but they also may say no. If they say no, then your kid will be taking M7H. |
Getting back to OP's question, depends. At my DD's (former) TJ feeder MS, there are plenty of kids that took Algebra I in 7th that missed the cutoff in IAAT, SOL, or both. The parents pushed to get them in. Whether this is a good idea is an entirely different question. Algebra I is not hard, BTW. It's further downstream that the kids might have problems. |
The entire top three quarters of TJ class enter having done at least Algebra 1 HN in 7th, among whom the top quarter enter having completed Algebra 2 in their 8th grade at the least. The bottom school kids admitted on automatic 1.5% basis that enter having completed just Algebra 1 in 8th, form the bottom segment of TJ, struggling to handle even the basic TJ level geometry and the follow on Algebra 2. |
My DC didnt meet the cutoff by a bit and did ha in 8th grade. I gave them the idea to do summer pe and double up on hg and halg2/trig in 9th, surprisingly they agreed(kid is social and not into studying as a past time). I really was nervous about it and kind of questioned if this tiger mom is doing more bad than good, well...they aced both in 9th grade and now have one of the highest grades in AP precal in the class, they are ahead of all the "naturally" gifted aap stars...the question is why? The answer is simple--there are two parts of iq--one is the one we see kids have in 1/2 grade==ability to read easily, do math, out of the box thinking and the other part is executive functioning-to organize oneself, be able to work with multiple intellectual concepts/make connections-this develops around grade 8/9---many times the two are not correlated. i have seen "gifted" kids go down and average kids go up. Now the gifted kids that go up they will become superstars, however executive fxn I believe is also correlated to social skills so sometimes working on these in grade 1/2 is more important than attending AOPS...AAPs favorite pasttime |
You took statistics which is above Algebra 2. The vast majority of the 65% of people who don't go to college are not "very successful". For every non college degree holding owner of an HVAC company there are a bunch of struggling HVAC technicians. |