Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they exist?
I'm almost 50 and I haven't met any kids in high school who are so dedicated, they voluntarily get books and self study to get a deeper dive into some subjects. Never! The only kids who sort of do it are being pushed by their parents.
My kid's peers just like my peers at this age are and were primarily interested in socialization and other fun things - video games, music, art, fashion, pop culture, makeup, etc.
Do those kids even exist? Is that not a figment of imagination?
They don't get books. They watch YouTube.
Anonymous wrote:Do they exist?
I'm almost 50 and I haven't met any kids in high school who are so dedicated, they voluntarily get books and self study to get a deeper dive into some subjects. Never! The only kids who sort of do it are being pushed by their parents.
My kid's peers just like my peers at this age are and were primarily interested in socialization and other fun things - video games, music, art, fashion, pop culture, makeup, etc.
Do those kids even exist? Is that not a figment of imagination?
Anonymous wrote:Do they exist?
I'm almost 50 and I haven't met any kids in high school who are so dedicated, they voluntarily get books and self study to get a deeper dive into some subjects. Never! The only kids who sort of do it are being pushed by their parents.
My kid's peers just like my peers at this age are and were primarily interested in socialization and other fun things - video games, music, art, fashion, pop culture, makeup, etc.
Do those kids even exist? Is that not a figment of imagination?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids do extra reading, research or video watching, actually, but not necessarily academic subjects taught in school.
My son has from a young age read pretty academic books. He's a history and military nerd, and this has served him well, because he's now majoring in Security Policy. But he was also interested in immunology as a kid (we're doctors and scientists), and he read my old college textbook on it, because he said it was warfare waged by the body on its attackers.
My daughter and her friend read literature not taught in their public school system - which is easy to do, given how abysmal their English classes are. Her friend read the Illiad and the Odyssey and is a Greek and Roman mythology enthusiast, and DD is more into classics of English lit.
None of it surprises me. That's how I was as a kid. When I couldn't get hold of anything else, I even read the dictionary. Pre-internet days...
+1. I was a nerd kid who read nerd books as a kid, but it's odd to call it "self study" to me. I was just reading about stuff that interested me. I ended up majoring in the stuff that interested me(like your son that was history for me), so it helped a bit but that wasn't the goal.
Anonymous wrote:Kids do extra reading, research or video watching, actually, but not necessarily academic subjects taught in school.
My son has from a young age read pretty academic books. He's a history and military nerd, and this has served him well, because he's now majoring in Security Policy. But he was also interested in immunology as a kid (we're doctors and scientists), and he read my old college textbook on it, because he said it was warfare waged by the body on its attackers.
My daughter and her friend read literature not taught in their public school system - which is easy to do, given how abysmal their English classes are. Her friend read the Illiad and the Odyssey and is a Greek and Roman mythology enthusiast, and DD is more into classics of English lit.
None of it surprises me. That's how I was as a kid. When I couldn't get hold of anything else, I even read the dictionary. Pre-internet days...