Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd consider starting music lessons. They can be a great challenge for a smart kid.
Look for summer camps that build skills. Rock climbing is great for problem solving and planning. Museum of Contemporary Art and Art House 7 offer excellent art camps that encourage creativity. Outdoor camps like Calleva encourage engagement and interest in nature. Finishing School offers excellent sewing camps that encourage kids to use executive function, measure, and think in 3D.
Russian School of Math does have an Arlington location, but I'd hold off for a few years. Encourage learning through play for now.
I was coming to say the same thing. Neither of my academically gifted kids wanted more academics outside of school at that age. We did a whole range of activities ranging from theater to art to chess to sports. Instead of loading your kid up with worksheets, help them to find passions and interests. And go to the library and encourage reading.
Yeah but my 3rd grader is not getting ANY academics INSIDE of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd consider starting music lessons. They can be a great challenge for a smart kid.
Look for summer camps that build skills. Rock climbing is great for problem solving and planning. Museum of Contemporary Art and Art House 7 offer excellent art camps that encourage creativity. Outdoor camps like Calleva encourage engagement and interest in nature. Finishing School offers excellent sewing camps that encourage kids to use executive function, measure, and think in 3D.
Russian School of Math does have an Arlington location, but I'd hold off for a few years. Encourage learning through play for now.
I was coming to say the same thing. Neither of my academically gifted kids wanted more academics outside of school at that age. We did a whole range of activities ranging from theater to art to chess to sports. Instead of loading your kid up with worksheets, help them to find passions and interests. And go to the library and encourage reading.
Yeah but my 3rd grader is not getting ANY academics INSIDE of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd consider starting music lessons. They can be a great challenge for a smart kid.
Look for summer camps that build skills. Rock climbing is great for problem solving and planning. Museum of Contemporary Art and Art House 7 offer excellent art camps that encourage creativity. Outdoor camps like Calleva encourage engagement and interest in nature. Finishing School offers excellent sewing camps that encourage kids to use executive function, measure, and think in 3D.
Russian School of Math does have an Arlington location, but I'd hold off for a few years. Encourage learning through play for now.
I was coming to say the same thing. Neither of my academically gifted kids wanted more academics outside of school at that age. We did a whole range of activities ranging from theater to art to chess to sports. Instead of loading your kid up with worksheets, help them to find passions and interests. And go to the library and encourage reading.
Anonymous wrote:I'd consider starting music lessons. They can be a great challenge for a smart kid.
Look for summer camps that build skills. Rock climbing is great for problem solving and planning. Museum of Contemporary Art and Art House 7 offer excellent art camps that encourage creativity. Outdoor camps like Calleva encourage engagement and interest in nature. Finishing School offers excellent sewing camps that encourage kids to use executive function, measure, and think in 3D.
Russian School of Math does have an Arlington location, but I'd hold off for a few years. Encourage learning through play for now.
are you jealous? You sound like a Debbie-downer! Don’t respond if you have nothing productive to contribute.Anonymous wrote:Another parent convinced their kid is a genius.
Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, you don’t need to pay anyone to supplement for a kid that young. Take home to the library to check out more advanced books, get some math games to play at home, have him help you measure and bake, let him add up coins to an amount you set, take him to museums, historical sites, and on hikes.
Choose units to study at home and do related activities and learning about that topic (example: solar system — make a model solar system, read books about it, and visit the air & space museum. Or ancient Egypt— learn about Egyptian numbers (& do some math problems with them), learn some hieroglyphics, build a lego pyramid, and mummify an apple.)
This kind of stuff is much more valuable to a 5-6 yo than extra worksheets or something. My kids are older now, but that’s the kind of stuff we did with them at that age.