Anonymous wrote:Looking to get feedback on Indian Mathematics and reviews on enrichment centers that teach it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_mathematics
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RIP Childhood.
Some kids love sports, some kids love math. Mine loves math. He chose to take RSM math classes. He asked to test for the Math Competition Program. He chose to participate in his schools math club. He chose to participate on a different math team. He loves doing it. He probably spends less time on math then the kid playing a travel sports spends on their sport.
Know your kid and meet their individual needs.
I am a bit confused why an Arlington parent would be mentioning AAP, that is an FCPS program, and the family would know if the kid was in it because the program starts in 3rd grade.
Well, I'm possibly moving from Arlington to Fairfax this summer, but that's not why I posted here. Being from Arlington, I just read it as a concept (advanced academics) not as a whole program for FCPS. I needed recs on math courses to help with early practice.
I think they can manage the challenge of a summer or year-round weekly math course (I want to review responses and pick a shorter class, too, thank you!). I would remove them from the course if they felt frustrated, but I've worked with them a bit -- I think they will be fine.
Otherwise, My kids are leisure kids/they're fine: watch sooo much YouTube, play for hours at the park, go to Barnes and Noble to buy useless toys sooo much. I clean up after them all day. Anyone else?![]()
Thanks for suggestions!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RIP Childhood.
Some kids love sports, some kids love math. Mine loves math. He chose to take RSM math classes. He asked to test for the Math Competition Program. He chose to participate in his schools math club. He chose to participate on a different math team. He loves doing it. He probably spends less time on math then the kid playing a travel sports spends on their sport.
Know your kid and meet their individual needs.
Sure. But that doesn't sound like the kid/situation that OP described.
For all we know, the OP asked their kid and their kid is fine with the idea or likes the idea. DS is going to be working with a writing tutor this summer. Writing is not a strength of his, he knows this as well as we do. We are talking 6 sessions, two a week in the weeks that he doesn't have camp or a vacation. I think the summer RSM classes are 2 weeks long and a few hours each day. It doesn't take up the whole day.
But I wouldn't do it if the kid wasn't interested.
I am a bit confused why an Arlington parent would be mentioning AAP, that is an FCPS program, and the family would know if the kid was in it because the program starts in 3rd grade.
How did you go about finding the writing tutor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RIP Childhood.
Some kids love sports, some kids love math. Mine loves math. He chose to take RSM math classes. He asked to test for the Math Competition Program. He chose to participate in his schools math club. He chose to participate on a different math team. He loves doing it. He probably spends less time on math then the kid playing a travel sports spends on their sport.
Know your kid and meet their individual needs.
Sure. But that doesn't sound like the kid/situation that OP described.
For all we know, the OP asked their kid and their kid is fine with the idea or likes the idea. DS is going to be working with a writing tutor this summer. Writing is not a strength of his, he knows this as well as we do. We are talking 6 sessions, two a week in the weeks that he doesn't have camp or a vacation. I think the summer RSM classes are 2 weeks long and a few hours each day. It doesn't take up the whole day.
But I wouldn't do it if the kid wasn't interested.
I am a bit confused why an Arlington parent would be mentioning AAP, that is an FCPS program, and the family would know if the kid was in it because the program starts in 3rd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RIP Childhood.
Some kids love sports, some kids love math. Mine loves math. He chose to take RSM math classes. He asked to test for the Math Competition Program. He chose to participate in his schools math club. He chose to participate on a different math team. He loves doing it. He probably spends less time on math then the kid playing a travel sports spends on their sport.
Know your kid and meet their individual needs.
Sure. But that doesn't sound like the kid/situation that OP described.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RIP Childhood.
Some kids love sports, some kids love math. Mine loves math. He chose to take RSM math classes. He asked to test for the Math Competition Program. He chose to participate in his schools math club. He chose to participate on a different math team. He loves doing it. He probably spends less time on math then the kid playing a travel sports spends on their sport.
Know your kid and meet their individual needs.
Anonymous wrote:Both Russian School of Math + AOPs are solid for extra math. We personally prefer the AOPs curriculum.
Anonymous wrote:RIP Childhood.