Anonymous wrote:My worry about immersion when the household does not speak the language is that it seems families end up needing to pay for tutors - which is really not something we can afford to take on. This worries me if the only way to be supportive is to try toay for something we can't afford. Anyone have an opinion on whether it really is necessary to pay for tutors if your household does not speak Chinese and it would be difficult to provide thT exposure on a constant and regular basis outside of school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's language immersion school so if you don't development some connection and enthusiasm about your child learning Mandarin, you are never going to be happy... and learning Mandarin is hard work.
My DC is grades ahead in English but struggles in Mandarin. Life will be a lot easier if he only had to learn in English but we slug through with tutors (we know zero Mandarin) bc we think learning Mandarin is worth it. Drank the Kool-Aid.
Curious why you think it is worth it?
Anonymous wrote:It's language immersion school so if you don't development some connection and enthusiasm about your child learning Mandarin, you are never going to be happy... and learning Mandarin is hard work.
My DC is grades ahead in English but struggles in Mandarin. Life will be a lot easier if he only had to learn in English but we slug through with tutors (we know zero Mandarin) bc we think learning Mandarin is worth it. Drank the Kool-Aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pros: Great location, diverse population, Chinese curriculum, great test scores
Cons: The belief that I'm doing right by my child by exposing him to Chinese. Which, I struggle with the fact that he may never use it outside of those 4 walls. And I can't really help him learn or really know what he is saying. The sinking feeling that you drank the Kool-aid. You also never feel welcome in the school also.
Signed,
A parent ready to jump ship![]()
+1. At LAMB in my case.
Anonymous wrote:Pros: Great location, diverse population, Chinese curriculum, great test scores
Cons: The belief that I'm doing right by my child by exposing him to Chinese. Which, I struggle with the fact that he may never use it outside of those 4 walls. And I can't really help him learn or really know what he is saying. The sinking feeling that you drank the Kool-aid. You also never feel welcome in the school also.
Signed,
A parent ready to jump ship![]()
Anonymous wrote:Pros: Great location, diverse population, Chinese curriculum, great test scores
Cons: The belief that I'm doing right by my child by exposing him to Chinese. Which, I struggle with the fact that he may never use it outside of those 4 walls. And I can't really help him learn or really know what he is saying. The sinking feeling that you drank the Kool-aid. You also never feel welcome in the school also.
Signed,
A parent ready to jump ship![]()
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for your responses. I read a post from a supposed YY parent in Great Schools that says that there is bullying in the school. It is that true?