Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Privates are at least a year behind publics in Maryland. Eureka is a year ahead of the Bridges and Saxon math curriculums for on level classes, 2 years ahead of kids in compacted math in MCPS
Privates are not a year behind. Public’s are ahead in name only. Privates go more in depth with the material. Or at least they do in our private high school.
Been there, done that, neither is good. It is a lost cause. Please do RSM to keep the kid up to internatonal standard.
Anonymous wrote:AOPS vs RSM vs Mathnasium etc? Any opinions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Privates are at least a year behind publics in Maryland. Eureka is a year ahead of the Bridges and Saxon math curriculums for on level classes, 2 years ahead of kids in compacted math in MCPS
Privates are not a year behind. Public’s are ahead in name only. Privates go more in depth with the material. Or at least they do in our private high school.
Anonymous wrote:Privates are at least a year behind publics in Maryland. Eureka is a year ahead of the Bridges and Saxon math curriculums for on level classes, 2 years ahead of kids in compacted math in MCPS
Anonymous wrote:We are at Beauvoir and have been supplementing math since Kindergarden. There’s just no appetite to push kids who are ahead- it’s a problem bigger than math but that’s where we are focusing supplementing.
Anonymous wrote:It really depends on your school. My kid in private elementary school does math supplement during school hours every other day. There is a math specialist who works with the kids wired for advanced math.
If math is an interest of your kid, you should probably do it outside school as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My elementary school kid is doing RSM after school for math enrichment. Most of his classmates attend a mix of public and private schools. I wonder if most kids in private school also do math supplements and whether they continue to do so through middle school. I think the school's math is fine, regardless of whether it's private or public (although it is annoying that one has to do this in private school as well), but it doesn't provide nearly as many opportunities to really understand math well or to challenge students with problem-solving. Will this be better in a private school, especially middle school?
Quick answer : no. Math in the US educational system is very weak, and that’s why a large number of students in STEM degrees are foreigners.
Anonymous wrote:My elementary school kid is doing RSM after school for math enrichment. Most of his classmates attend a mix of public and private schools. I wonder if most kids in private school also do math supplements and whether they continue to do so through middle school. I think the school's math is fine, regardless of whether it's private or public (although it is annoying that one has to do this in private school as well), but it doesn't provide nearly as many opportunities to really understand math well or to challenge students with problem-solving. Will this be better in a private school, especially middle school?