Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get your concern, if it comes from a fear that this child is absorbing a warped sense of his own academic worth, which will set him up for a cruel awakening come college admissions.
You can casually drop into the conversation with his mother that your kids all had straight As, as did their friends, at that age, and it was expected of them. She won't like it, but your duty isn't to her... it's to your nephew. It's important for his long-term well-being that his mother becomes more realistic.
Both my kids had straight As in middle school, even the one with severe ADHD, ASD level 1, and low processing speed. So...
If you ever start wondering why people don’t like you, revisit this paragraph.
Anonymous wrote:This obviously totally depends on the school he goes to. If he went to St Albans, he would be the only one. At many DCPS MSes, it would be 20% of students.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you care? That's not spoiling.
Anonymous wrote:I get your concern, if it comes from a fear that this child is absorbing a warped sense of his own academic worth, which will set him up for a cruel awakening come college admissions.
You can casually drop into the conversation with his mother that your kids all had straight As, as did their friends, at that age, and it was expected of them. She won't like it, but your duty isn't to her... it's to your nephew. It's important for his long-term well-being that his mother becomes more realistic.
Both my kids had straight As in middle school, even the one with severe ADHD, ASD level 1, and low processing speed. So...
Anonymous wrote:This obviously totally depends on the school he goes to. If he went to St Albans, he would be the only one. At many DCPS MSes, it would be 20% of students.
Anonymous wrote:This obviously totally depends on the school he goes to. If he went to St Albans, he would be the only one. At many DCPS MSes, it would be 20% of students.