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Reply to "SJC not work for a kid"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Honestly, SJC and a lot of private schools seem to be reality checks for parents who think their kids are exceptional but are really not. The school isn’t holding anyone back, they’re placing them where they need to be. They’re blocked from classes bc they’re not good enough. Go to public school where you can harangue the school and get your kids into the classes u want them to get into. Did families really think their kid could get into any class they want in private school bc they pay tuition and their kid is a “hard worker”? [/quote] My kid can't move their GPA b/c they are required to take scripture and they are not a Scholar. So Scripture is not an honors class year and pulls down weighted GPA each year - even though every year gets an "A" in the course[/quote] I don’t think the scripture requirement was a secret. If u wanted ur kid to get scholar treatment, why would you put them in a school where they are not a scholar? Move them to a school where it will be easier to get good a high GPA. I don’t think private schools are marketing themselves as places where it easy easy to get high GPAs.[/quote] The point is that is isn’t easy to get a high GPA not because you don’t have the chops but because you are blocked. APs are APs no matter where you take them…public or private. They are the great equalizer which is why colleges value them over honors chases. It is an apples to apples comparison no matter where you go to school. But if you are blocked from taking the number of APs you need the way you are at SJC, you will not stand out among public or private schools despite your hard work. My son got 5’s on both of the national AP exams that SJC allowed him to take. He’s got what it takes to succeed in the right circumstances. [/quote] Your kid can self-study for APs during the school year or over the summer. When life (or SJC) throws you a curveball, you need to figure out a new plan. This does not mean giving up and dropping out - it means taking classes online or at local privates during the summer. Be sure to get the classes pre-approved by SJC so they will show up on the official transcript. That’s what we did and it all worked out. [/quote] I find this comment frankly bizarre. Somehow you are fine that SJC blocked your kid from just taking the class at SJC, even though I gather your kid did well in an online class and did well on the AP test? Wouldn't you throw that into SJC's face as proof their existing policies are wrong?[/quote] Why are SJC's exisiting policies wrong? Because you and a couple of other PPs don't like them? SJC is a private school. Their policies are well laid out in the handbook. Nobody is forcing you or anybody else to send their kid there. If public school folks are looking at private highschools, I HIGHLY recommend mapping out a 4 year plan for your kid based on electives/requirements/etc. And just because they have all As in a public school doesn't mean they are going to automatically get placed into honors classes. Be realistic about their abilities and realize that you are not going to be able to "talk" them into higher level classes at any of these schools. If you decide maximizing APs is your goal, you should send your kid to a public. Because of religion requirements, that knocks out a chance to take an AP class for ALL kids. If you have a kid who wants to do art, or choir, or music, that knocks out another class that could be filled with an AP. Scholars kids also have a required senior seminar that means one less chance to take an AP class. [/quote] You don't sound like the person who actually made the comment, so I am not sure why you are responding. My only point is that if this person was denied taking the AP class at SJC, then independently took the class online and subsequently scored very high on the AP test...does that not poke a giant hole in the way SJC operates? Isn't that empirical evidence of a flawed system? [/quote] Sometimes apples don't fall too far from the tree my friend.[/quote]
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