Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just pull him now because you aren't the type of parent who is going to be willing to make your child do math 365 days a year. It is a slog and some kids will complain and slack off. Your job is to support the instructors there.
We are a Latino family and my kids didn't get pushed in elementary school at all- there were such low expectations. Add to that teachers just assumed my kids were NOT advanced in math because they were Latino (they both look stereotypically "brown Latino" ). Kumon gave them the experience of someone setting high standards for them. They were rewarded for doing well at Kumon by the staff AND negative reactions were given for slacking off instead of making excuses for them.
NP. My sympathies, we’re a Black family and teachers assumed the same about my son. It was sweet he made it into next year’s accelerated programs despite these biased teachers.
I’d keep an eye on that teacher. It can be so incredibly difficult to teach new concepts to students. But there’s strict and then there’s crossing the line.
Anonymous wrote:Just pull him now because you aren't the type of parent who is going to be willing to make your child do math 365 days a year. It is a slog and some kids will complain and slack off. Your job is to support the instructors there.
We are a Latino family and my kids didn't get pushed in elementary school at all- there were such low expectations. Add to that teachers just assumed my kids were NOT advanced in math because they were Latino (they both look stereotypically "brown Latino" ). Kumon gave them the experience of someone setting high standards for them. They were rewarded for doing well at Kumon by the staff AND negative reactions were given for slacking off instead of making excuses for them.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people who work with kids are shockingly bad at working with kids.
Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.
Anonymous wrote:Just pull him now because you aren't the type of parent who is going to be willing to make your child do math 365 days a year. It is a slog and some kids will complain and slack off. Your job is to support the instructors there.
We are a Latino family and my kids didn't get pushed in elementary school at all- there were such low expectations. Add to that teachers just assumed my kids were NOT advanced in math because they were Latino (they both look stereotypically "brown Latino" ). Kumon gave them the experience of someone setting high standards for them. They were rewarded for doing well at Kumon by the staff AND negative reactions were given for slacking off instead of making excuses for them.
Anonymous wrote:Just pull him now because you aren't the type of parent who is going to be willing to make your child do math 365 days a year. It is a slog and some kids will complain and slack off. Your job is to support the instructors there.
We are a Latino family and my kids didn't get pushed in elementary school at all- there were such low expectations. Add to that teachers just assumed my kids were NOT advanced in math because they were Latino (they both look stereotypically "brown Latino" ). Kumon gave them the experience of someone setting high standards for them. They were rewarded for doing well at Kumon by the staff AND negative reactions were given for slacking off instead of making excuses for them.
Anonymous wrote:Kumon instructors are usually high school students. Bring it up to the manager--they can help her to learn proper communication skills. It is a learned skill.