Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
DH and I are in STEM and had math instruction in different European countries. He's the mathematician, but he can't teach. I hate math but I can figure things out and explain. Videos online were helpful to my kids.
So I was able to help my kids until Calculus, DH helping vaguely by giving them the answer but being unable to explain it, and then I hired a tutor for my son's AP Calc BC class. If my second kid takes differential equations, I will be able to help, because for some reason that's easier for me than AP Calc BC, which is so blaeurgh.
We muddle through.
how much did it cost to hire a Calc BC tutor? pretty much needed for entire academic year, and how often? Did the tutor follow the school textbook problems, or use a workbook or come up with custom lesson plan, and how did it align with school lesson plan? was it in-person or online?
A lot, because we went with a very expensive tutoring outfit close to our house, Prep Matters. In-person once a week for several months. The tutor explained the concepts that DS was missing and prepared him for the AP exam. No textbook, just custom, I suppose, with a ton of practice AP exams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
DH and I are in STEM and had math instruction in different European countries. He's the mathematician, but he can't teach. I hate math but I can figure things out and explain. Videos online were helpful to my kids.
So I was able to help my kids until Calculus, DH helping vaguely by giving them the answer but being unable to explain it, and then I hired a tutor for my son's AP Calc BC class. If my second kid takes differential equations, I will be able to help, because for some reason that's easier for me than AP Calc BC, which is so blaeurgh.
We muddle through.
how much did it cost to hire a Calc BC tutor? pretty much needed for entire academic year, and how often? Did the tutor follow the school textbook problems, or use a workbook or come up with custom lesson plan, and how did it align with school lesson plan? was it in-person or online?
5th and 6th grade math is not rocket scienceAnonymous wrote:My 5th grader is in advanced math (not FCPS). I'm able to spot calculation errors, but otherwise I'm completely at sea when it comes to math homework: I do not know how to do the problems, or sometimes I know but I'm not familiar with the method she's being asked to use.
Anybody else? What do you do when your kid needs help? I am not 100% convinced DD should be in advanced math - not because she can't do it, but because the class is moving fast and I want to make sure she gets the basics down really well at this level, which I apparently did not.
Anonymous wrote:
DH and I are in STEM and had math instruction in different European countries. He's the mathematician, but he can't teach. I hate math but I can figure things out and explain. Videos online were helpful to my kids.
So I was able to help my kids until Calculus, DH helping vaguely by giving them the answer but being unable to explain it, and then I hired a tutor for my son's AP Calc BC class. If my second kid takes differential equations, I will be able to help, because for some reason that's easier for me than AP Calc BC, which is so blaeurgh.
We muddle through.