Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the parent of 2 young men who are now in college (one will graduate tomorrow -woo-hoo!), I'd venture a guess that your son just has freshman boy-itis. In our experience, this is best cured by the shock induced in the patient upon seeing his 9th-grade transcript. Recovery, in the case of both our sons, was complete and dramatic. The upside was that it gave the school counselor a strong positive narrative line for the recommendation letter to colleges.
Freshman boy-itis is a quite common ailment. In the case of our own patient, we are hoping that a treatment that harnesses the patient's own natural competitiveness, in combination with a much-anticipated visit to an older sibling's new university next fall, will effect a cure.
If it's too late to get into a college-run sports camp and you don't posses a college-age sibling, how about planning a 2-3 day vacation this summer in the vicinity of an appealing college? Hit Monticello and then UVA, or maybe NYC with a side serving of NYU or Columbia or another of the many universities there. Then give him a good (but not over-bearing) dose of reality about how selective these schools and Penn State are.
Anonymous wrote:As the parent of 2 young men who are now in college (one will graduate tomorrow -woo-hoo!), I'd venture a guess that your son just has freshman boy-itis. In our experience, this is best cured by the shock induced in the patient upon seeing his 9th-grade transcript. Recovery, in the case of both our sons, was complete and dramatic. The upside was that it gave the school counselor a strong positive narrative line for the recommendation letter to colleges.
Anonymous wrote:To compact the course selection for someone who is sure of a particular profession.
Anonymous wrote:Accelerated med programs are very very competitive to get into. As a physician myself, I actually hate the programs, I simply don't believe that most 17-18 year olds can possibly know yet whether they are interested in/motivated for a career as a physician. In my experience quite a few people I know that came through those programs are unhappy with their career choice made so early and have left the field. That said, they are efficient and take the pressure off in college of getting into med school.
If he is lacking motivation and focus now, this may not be a rational choice, I think the best approach is to say "too early to worry about this" since he is in the right math/science track to go this route if he really wants to and does well enough by senior year.
Freshman year grades are by far the least important for college admissions, can perhaps use this experience to say "if you don't want to close doors and still consider accelerated or direct admission medical school programs, then think of 10th grade as a fresh start, and see how motivated you can stay"
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+1
Anonymous wrote:You seemed pretty intense for someone who is a freshman in h.s. I think you have to see how it plays out. Your child has to do the best they possibly can do but your putting pressure on this early in the game isn't going to help. Are you the one who wants him to be a doctor or does he?
Anonymous wrote:He needs the experience of taking the highest level of Chemistry, Bio, and Calculus offered at his high school. Unless he performs at the tippy top in these subjects, he is not on-track for an accelerated med program.