Anonymous wrote:No need to worry about getting extra time for magnet test. Last year's test had no time limit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a DC at Cold Spring HGC. OP, that is a legitimate reason for concern. My highly gifted DD is very meticulous and prefers to work at a more deliberate pace as well. We have always suspected ADD but, since she's bright enough to compensate, haven't pursued accommodations. The CS curriculum is wonderful and challenging, and the teachers are excellent, but the pace is swift and most of the time children must complete writing assignments during the school day. Teachers are attentive to individual student needs--if there is a problem they do their best to identify and support it--but the classes are large, which means one-on-one time is very limited. In the end children must perform to do well, and the kids are often shocked when they start getting Is and Ns for the first time. That said, most children adjust over the course of the first year and end up doing just fine. The occasional one will leave and return to their home school, which is really not that big of a deal. My advice: prepare your child to expect to work harder and faster, and be optimistic. Very likely your DC will adapt and find the experience very worthwhile!
Your post makes me so nervous. How did your DD adjust?
She got a few Is in the first quarter, thought she was "the dumbest in the class," and had confidence issues. One part of it was that she had gotten used to coasting, and really did have to learn to work harder. She's up to Ps and a few ESs, and that's fine. We kept talking to her about being glad she had such smart peers that she could learn from, and she started to get excited about that. I think she feels like she belongs now, but still has some issues with speed and focus. And likely always will.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a DC at Cold Spring HGC. OP, that is a legitimate reason for concern. My highly gifted DD is very meticulous and prefers to work at a more deliberate pace as well. We have always suspected ADD but, since she's bright enough to compensate, haven't pursued accommodations. The CS curriculum is wonderful and challenging, and the teachers are excellent, but the pace is swift and most of the time children must complete writing assignments during the school day. Teachers are attentive to individual student needs--if there is a problem they do their best to identify and support it--but the classes are large, which means one-on-one time is very limited. In the end children must perform to do well, and the kids are often shocked when they start getting Is and Ns for the first time. That said, most children adjust over the course of the first year and end up doing just fine. The occasional one will leave and return to their home school, which is really not that big of a deal. My advice: prepare your child to expect to work harder and faster, and be optimistic. Very likely your DC will adapt and find the experience very worthwhile!
Your post makes me so nervous. How did your DD adjust?
Anonymous wrote:Have a DC at Cold Spring HGC. OP, that is a legitimate reason for concern. My highly gifted DD is very meticulous and prefers to work at a more deliberate pace as well. We have always suspected ADD but, since she's bright enough to compensate, haven't pursued accommodations. The CS curriculum is wonderful and challenging, and the teachers are excellent, but the pace is swift and most of the time children must complete writing assignments during the school day. Teachers are attentive to individual student needs--if there is a problem they do their best to identify and support it--but the classes are large, which means one-on-one time is very limited. In the end children must perform to do well, and the kids are often shocked when they start getting Is and Ns for the first time. That said, most children adjust over the course of the first year and end up doing just fine. The occasional one will leave and return to their home school, which is really not that big of a deal. My advice: prepare your child to expect to work harder and faster, and be optimistic. Very likely your DC will adapt and find the experience very worthwhile!
Anonymous wrote:To our surprise, DD was accepted to Cold Spring HGC. She is bright, hard working, curious, creative but has a slower and more deliberate approach to her work. She does not have an official ADHD diagnosis, but we would not be surprise if she would be given one for her slow processing speed. Her current home school isn't necessarily challenging her, but it is not as though she is very bored. Most of the time, she finishes her work quite slowly but on time. However, once every so often, she does require her teacher's reminder to make sure she works to elaborate on her writing responses to reading group books. Otherwise, she scores extremely high on tests, is a great (but slow) writer. She does have peers at her school who are equally bright and motivated.
We are on the fence with the HGC, particularly since it is at Cold Spring (seems the kids there have such high test scores that it is a bit intimidating). I do think she will be fine and eventually adapt and meet her potential wherever she goes, but I am questioning if the extra stress this early in her academics lifetime is the right decision.
For Cold Spring HGC parents, can you speak to the dynamics at HGC? What are the biggest pros and cons you have experienced? How well do the kids interact with other HGC classmates and the other homeschool kids? How are the teachers -- I heard they have an older experienced female teacher and a very young mid-20's male teacher? Do the teachers work with the students' specific learning potential and needs, or is the class so large and the pace so quick that this isn't possible? I do worry about DD's slower speed. Is it worthwhile to go to Cold Spring when we feel DD's current homeschool has some equivalent performing peers already, which is not to say they will be appropriately enriched but hopefully they will still continue to be grouped together?