Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per my RMIB kid, it's a ton of work, but not particularly hard. DC is thinking it may not be worth it for a lot of kids, and is telling their younger sibling to not do it.
I have a kid starting the RMIB next year. Why does your DC not recommend it for his/her younger sibling? We debated about it a ton, and are not sure how much it will be worth it.
For our kids it was worth it - after undergrad at umd, one got PhD in engineering from MIT and second one is in t-20 medical school. Yes it’s not easy but if your child is capable, I’d strongly recommend it
But you can easily get into UMD without IB. Tons of MCPS students go to UMD. So what was the point of all the work for IB? It didn't get her into MIT and med school. UMD did.
Anonymous wrote:Any perspective on whether its really worth it - child will need to decide next year. Overall the student is definitely capable although I wouldn't consider writing a strength. Based on some research.
Pros
Definitely shows maximum rigor at school we are at.
Preparedness for college.
Cons
Pretty intensive work and stress - is that worth the value which may be somewhat limited
Writing and humanities focus for more math/science oriented child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per my RMIB kid, it's a ton of work, but not particularly hard. DC is thinking it may not be worth it for a lot of kids, and is telling their younger sibling to not do it.
I have a kid starting the RMIB next year. Why does your DC not recommend it for his/her younger sibling? We debated about it a ton, and are not sure how much it will be worth it.
For our kids it was worth it - after undergrad at umd, one got PhD in engineering from MIT and second one is in t-20 medical school. Yes it’s not easy but if your child is capable, I’d strongly recommend it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends where they do it. BCC - total waste of time, RMIB used to be prestigious but has gone down the tubes.
Lycee Rochambeau - probably your best bet
Oh, hey! More private school recruiting!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Per my RMIB kid, it's a ton of work, but not particularly hard. DC is thinking it may not be worth it for a lot of kids, and is telling their younger sibling to not do it.
I have a kid starting the RMIB next year. Why does your DC not recommend it for his/her younger sibling? We debated about it a ton, and are not sure how much it will be worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Per my RMIB kid, it's a ton of work, but not particularly hard. DC is thinking it may not be worth it for a lot of kids, and is telling their younger sibling to not do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends where they do it. BCC - total waste of time, RMIB used to be prestigious but has gone down the tubes.
Lycee Rochambeau - probably your best bet
Oh, hey! More private school recruiting!![]()
Well my own kids go to Whitman, that's just my opinion on the IB opportunities locally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends where they do it. BCC - total waste of time, RMIB used to be prestigious but has gone down the tubes.
Lycee Rochambeau - probably your best bet
Oh, hey! More private school recruiting!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Any perspective on whether its really worth it - child will need to decide next year. Overall the student is definitely capable although I wouldn't consider writing a strength. Based on some research.
Pros
Definitely shows maximum rigor at school we are at.
Preparedness for college.
Cons
Pretty intensive work and stress - is that worth the value which may be somewhat limited
Writing and humanities focus for more math/science oriented child.
Anonymous wrote:the additional time commuting to/from the new school should be part of your equation.
Anonymous wrote:Any perspective on whether its really worth it - child will need to decide next year. Overall the student is definitely capable although I wouldn't consider writing a strength. Based on some research.
Pros
Definitely shows maximum rigor at school we are at.
Preparedness for college.
Cons
Pretty intensive work and stress - is that worth the value which may be somewhat limited
Writing and humanities focus for more math/science oriented child.