Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher at YHS and I don’t think there’s any way to leave it at home. My kids write essays in class or do collaborative work on Google Slides or make and edit videos. I know other teachers give tests online and I’m pretty sure math teachers use online programs daily
This is ridiculously depressing.
We should not be having kids make freaking PowerPoint slides, that is like the worst thing imaginable about corporate America, why in the world is in our education system
Editing videos? That should only be in like one multimedia class, are they doing videos and like history and nonsense like that?
And math should be pencil and paper, even our AOPS course which is online says to do the work on paper first and then take a picture to submit it to the teacher.
Is this because the classes are too big, the teachers are resorting to tools to automate a lot of the classwork? What caused this?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher at YHS and I don’t think there’s any way to leave it at home. My kids write essays in class or do collaborative work on Google Slides or make and edit videos. I know other teachers give tests online and I’m pretty sure math teachers use online programs daily
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't every school district use laptops in HS? I'd work on a system to help your DS remember it.
Agree with this.
Your kid is going to have to learn how to manage it at some point. The earlier he begins, the more practice he gets, the more he develops his skills. The world is not going to accommodate his every weakness forever.
With phones banned, he may need to communicate with people via email once in a while.
How is that better? It's more disruptive to have to go into email.
Anonymous wrote:At w-l, they carry their stuff around all day (my kids never requested lockers), so there isn’t much of a chance of it getting lost. I’d equate it to losing your iPad or binder in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't every school district use laptops in HS? I'd work on a system to help your DS remember it.
Agree with this.
Your kid is going to have to learn how to manage it at some point. The earlier he begins, the more practice he gets, the more he develops his skills. The world is not going to accommodate his every weakness forever.
With phones banned, he may need to communicate with people via email once in a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't every school district use laptops in HS? I'd work on a system to help your DS remember it.
Agree with this.
Your kid is going to have to learn how to manage it at some point. The earlier he begins, the more practice he gets, the more he develops his skills. The world is not going to accommodate his every weakness forever.
Anonymous wrote:Doesn't every school district use laptops in HS? I'd work on a system to help your DS remember it.
Anonymous wrote:We have a rising 8th grader heading to WL.
We are trying to understand how the high school will be using laptops during the school day?
DS is a bit ADHD so is prone to losing things, so I would prefer they leave the laptop at home for assignments and homework.
People state they use the laptops in class, can you elaborate on how they are used IN the classroom, when presumably there would be instruction by the teacher.
Anonymous wrote:We have a rising 8th grader heading to WL.
We are trying to understand how the high school will be using laptops during the school day?
DS is a bit ADHD so is prone to losing things, so I would prefer they leave the laptop at home for assignments and homework.
People state they use the laptops in class, can you elaborate on how they are used IN the classroom, when presumably there would be instruction by the teacher.