Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Are you trying to have your kids study for the MAP? It is not a test you study for.
as far i as can tell (and both DH and i have engineering degrees, so we do know some math), the kids are good at math. their curriculum was fairly advanced, but it's different from the MCPS. for example, they started geometry in first grade, and built from there. the fourth-grader can already do some algebra and nontrivial geometry.
but on the other hand, they don't do quadratic questions in seventh grade (but they do, for example, geometric proofs, in sixth grade). so yes, i would like to know what holes the kids have compared to MCPS curriculum and yes, i would have them master that material, if it's not too difficult and too far removed from their base knowledge. it doesn't make sense to go to a slower track just because they didn't cover a topic or two, if that makes sense.
thank you for your help.
Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Are you trying to have your kids study for the MAP? It is not a test you study for.
Tell that to the preppers angling for scarce magnet seats...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Are you trying to have your kids study for the MAP? It is not a test you study for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Are you trying to have your kids study for the MAP? It is not a test you study for.
as far i as can tell (and both DH and i have engineering degrees, so we do know some math), the kids are good at math. their curriculum was fairly advanced, but it's different from the MCPS. for example, they started geometry in first grade, and built from there. the fourth-grader can already do some algebra and nontrivial geometry.
but on the other hand, they don't do quadratic questions in seventh grade (but they do, for example, geometric proofs, in sixth grade). so yes, i would like to know what holes the kids have compared to MCPS curriculum and yes, i would have them master that material, if it's not too difficult and too far removed from their base knowledge. it doesn't make sense to go to a slower track just because they didn't cover a topic or two, if that makes sense.
thank you for your help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Are you trying to have your kids study for the MAP? It is not a test you study for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
DCUM kids regularly get 280 and up.
Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?
Anonymous wrote:thank you! this is helpful, but only goes to 220 or something. what do difficult questions look like?