Anonymous wrote:My daughter is currently a sophomore at wl and I do not think freshman year was bad in term if workload. There is a wide variety for workload between teachers though, so it is possible that you will draw a short straw and end up with very rigorous teachers. There is one ap class that is encouraged if you are pre-ib, otherwise they encourage all intensified classes. Intensified classes do not have a gpa bump, only ap and ib classrs do. I think that by junior year if you do full ib it is very intense.
College options from Gonzaga vs wl are very different. Most of my daughter’s friends (pre-ib and very driven) are aiming for state schools. When I was in highschool (went to Gonzaga), most of my friends were aiming top 20 college if not Ivy League. Just different trajectories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is struggling now why do you assume you should be looking at AP and Honors classes?
This is my kids choice. If they go WL they want those classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our DS is currently at Gonzaga, and its been a grueling and stressful start to high school. We have at least 2-3 quizzes a week and it seems like 2 tests a week. Then there is the essay on short stories or science reports. Its a lot of structure writing and testing nonstop, not to mention the math and science problem sets but those are pretty straightforward.
He is struggling with the writing, feeling like they aren't even teaching him how to do these structured analysis, quotes, and references, all sorts of grammar rules to follow.
We are hoping it would be a bit more support and slower ramp up at WL -- we may transfer in the Spring. Can anyone speak about the current assignment load for the Honors and AP classes that freshman take? How often are quizzes and tests? How many writing assignments have they had so far? How stressful are mid-terms for the end of this semester?
We expect by the time IB classes, the reading and writing effort will exceed even the load we have now, but we hope that there will be maturity and a more gradual ramp up in skills to ready for that point. But anyone who can speak to the IB experience, that would be welcome as well.
Just a reality check. My child is a sophomore at Yorktown (so not WL) and has quizzes in 2 classes every day they meet, many weeks has 2 tests in a week, and has regular writing assignments in both AP classes that require a lot of structure, references, etc. It is a constant stream of testing and assignments. He is taking 2 APs and all intensified. Last year it was a bit less intense but he did do a good amount of writing and I helped him with the writing and he worked with the teachers on drafts to improve.
I guess my point is this is all going to be happening anywhere you go if the kid is in the highest rigor classes. Maybe you need to really supplement at home and support and push through? I think moving mid year will create a whole set of other issues for your kid.
That’s sophomore year — I’m looking at Freshman year, and how it ramps up. He wants to switch in January because this pace is not sustainable. Can anyone speak to tests, quizzes, essays for Freshman?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our DS is currently at Gonzaga, and its been a grueling and stressful start to high school. We have at least 2-3 quizzes a week and it seems like 2 tests a week. Then there is the essay on short stories or science reports. Its a lot of structure writing and testing nonstop, not to mention the math and science problem sets but those are pretty straightforward.
He is struggling with the writing, feeling like they aren't even teaching him how to do these structured analysis, quotes, and references, all sorts of grammar rules to follow.
We are hoping it would be a bit more support and slower ramp up at WL -- we may transfer in the Spring. Can anyone speak about the current assignment load for the Honors and AP classes that freshman take? How often are quizzes and tests? How many writing assignments have they had so far? How stressful are mid-terms for the end of this semester?
We expect by the time IB classes, the reading and writing effort will exceed even the load we have now, but we hope that there will be maturity and a more gradual ramp up in skills to ready for that point. But anyone who can speak to the IB experience, that would be welcome as well.
Just a reality check. My child is a sophomore at Yorktown (so not WL) and has quizzes in 2 classes every day they meet, many weeks has 2 tests in a week, and has regular writing assignments in both AP classes that require a lot of structure, references, etc. It is a constant stream of testing and assignments. He is taking 2 APs and all intensified. Last year it was a bit less intense but he did do a good amount of writing and I helped him with the writing and he worked with the teachers on drafts to improve.
I guess my point is this is all going to be happening anywhere you go if the kid is in the highest rigor classes. Maybe you need to really supplement at home and support and push through? I think moving mid year will create a whole set of other issues for your kid.
That’s sophomore year — I’m looking at Freshman year, and how it ramps up. He wants to switch in January because this pace is not sustainable. Can anyone speak to tests, quizzes, essays for Freshman?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our DS is currently at Gonzaga, and its been a grueling and stressful start to high school. We have at least 2-3 quizzes a week and it seems like 2 tests a week. Then there is the essay on short stories or science reports. Its a lot of structure writing and testing nonstop, not to mention the math and science problem sets but those are pretty straightforward.
He is struggling with the writing, feeling like they aren't even teaching him how to do these structured analysis, quotes, and references, all sorts of grammar rules to follow.
We are hoping it would be a bit more support and slower ramp up at WL -- we may transfer in the Spring. Can anyone speak about the current assignment load for the Honors and AP classes that freshman take? How often are quizzes and tests? How many writing assignments have they had so far? How stressful are mid-terms for the end of this semester?
We expect by the time IB classes, the reading and writing effort will exceed even the load we have now, but we hope that there will be maturity and a more gradual ramp up in skills to ready for that point. But anyone who can speak to the IB experience, that would be welcome as well.
Just a reality check. My child is a sophomore at Yorktown (so not WL) and has quizzes in 2 classes every day they meet, many weeks has 2 tests in a week, and has regular writing assignments in both AP classes that require a lot of structure, references, etc. It is a constant stream of testing and assignments. He is taking 2 APs and all intensified. Last year it was a bit less intense but he did do a good amount of writing and I helped him with the writing and he worked with the teachers on drafts to improve.
I guess my point is this is all going to be happening anywhere you go if the kid is in the highest rigor classes. Maybe you need to really supplement at home and support and push through? I think moving mid year will create a whole set of other issues for your kid.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is currently a sophomore at wl and I do not think freshman year was bad in term if workload. There is a wide variety for workload between teachers though, so it is possible that you will draw a short straw and end up with very rigorous teachers. There is one ap class that is encouraged if you are pre-ib, otherwise they encourage all intensified classes. Intensified classes do not have a gpa bump, only ap and ib classrs do. I think that by junior year if you do full ib it is very intense.
College options from Gonzaga vs wl are very different. Most of my daughter’s friends (pre-ib and very driven) are aiming for state schools. When I was in highschool (went to Gonzaga), most of my friends were aiming top 20 college if not Ivy League. Just different trajectories.
Anonymous wrote:Our DS is currently at Gonzaga, and its been a grueling and stressful start to high school. We have at least 2-3 quizzes a week and it seems like 2 tests a week. Then there is the essay on short stories or science reports. Its a lot of structure writing and testing nonstop, not to mention the math and science problem sets but those are pretty straightforward.
He is struggling with the writing, feeling like they aren't even teaching him how to do these structured analysis, quotes, and references, all sorts of grammar rules to follow.
We are hoping it would be a bit more support and slower ramp up at WL -- we may transfer in the Spring. Can anyone speak about the current assignment load for the Honors and AP classes that freshman take? How often are quizzes and tests? How many writing assignments have they had so far? How stressful are mid-terms for the end of this semester?
We expect by the time IB classes, the reading and writing effort will exceed even the load we have now, but we hope that there will be maturity and a more gradual ramp up in skills to ready for that point. But anyone who can speak to the IB experience, that would be welcome as well.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is currently a sophomore at wl and I do not think freshman year was bad in term if workload. There is a wide variety for workload between teachers though, so it is possible that you will draw a short straw and end up with very rigorous teachers. There is one ap class that is encouraged if you are pre-ib, otherwise they encourage all intensified classes. Intensified classes do not have a gpa bump, only ap and ib classrs do. I think that by junior year if you do full ib it is very intense.
College options from Gonzaga vs wl are very different. Most of my daughter’s friends (pre-ib and very driven) are aiming for state schools. When I was in highschool (went to Gonzaga), most of my friends were aiming top 20 college if not Ivy League. Just different trajectories.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is currently a sophomore at wl and I do not think freshman year was bad in term if workload. There is a wide variety for workload between teachers though, so it is possible that you will draw a short straw and end up with very rigorous teachers. There is one ap class that is encouraged if you are pre-ib, otherwise they encourage all intensified classes. Intensified classes do not have a gpa bump, only ap and ib classrs do. I think that by junior year if you do full ib it is very intense.
College options from Gonzaga vs wl are very different. Most of my daughter’s friends (pre-ib and very driven) are aiming for state schools. When I was in highschool (went to Gonzaga), most of my friends were aiming top 20 college if not Ivy League. Just different trajectories.
Anonymous wrote:If your child is struggling now why do you assume you should be looking at AP and Honors classes?
Anonymous wrote:If your child is struggling now why do you assume you should be looking at AP and Honors classes?