Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid should do it so that they are in a class with other high performing kids. Kids with behavioral problems impede the learning process of everyone in the classroom. Being in a more advanced class might be a way to avoid that.
It doesn’t work like that, though. It’s not a separate track. Precalc at JR will have some 9th graders whose parents forced them against their will to get up at dawn for this “0 period” class, and it will also have seniors who are just getting to precalc, and everyone in between.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid should do it so that they are in a class with other high performing kids. Kids with behavioral problems impede the learning process of everyone in the classroom. Being in a more advanced class might be a way to avoid that.
Anonymous wrote:Don't push.
Kids often get into trouble with this program because the ability to do Algebra 1 well in 7th grade has very little correlation with the ability/aptitude/desire to do post-calculus math in 11th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Unless he loves math, there's no reason to accelerate that much. There's no reason to take calculus in 10th grade.