Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I read the IB page on the BCC site and got the impression that the kids form a tight bond. Is it still @ 100 kids and a school within a school?
A tight bond is probably not unusual for successful IB programs. Kids need each other to survive the program and get the diploma.
I would assume its tight bond between a group and then there are the outliers who probably are not included so it can be good and bad. I don't see the point of it.
OP here - I asked about the bond because BCC is a huge school and my kid will be new. The “surviving” comment is disheartening - why can’t the program be something inspiring that the kids want to go through?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I read the IB page on the BCC site and got the impression that the kids form a tight bond. Is it still @ 100 kids and a school within a school?
A tight bond is probably not unusual for successful IB programs. Kids need each other to survive the program and get the diploma.
I would assume its tight bond between a group and then there are the outliers who probably are not included so it can be good and bad. I don't see the point of it.
OP here - I asked about the bond because BCC is a huge school and my kid will be new. The “surviving” comment is disheartening - why can’t the program be something inspiring that the kids want to go through?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I read the IB page on the BCC site and got the impression that the kids form a tight bond. Is it still @ 100 kids and a school within a school?
A tight bond is probably not unusual for successful IB programs. Kids need each other to survive the program and get the diploma.
I would assume its tight bond between a group and then there are the outliers who probably are not included so it can be good and bad. I don't see the point of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I read the IB page on the BCC site and got the impression that the kids form a tight bond. Is it still @ 100 kids and a school within a school?
A tight bond is probably not unusual for successful IB programs. Kids need each other to survive the program and get the diploma.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I read the IB page on the BCC site and got the impression that the kids form a tight bond. Is it still @ 100 kids and a school within a school?
Anonymous wrote:FYI you can choose to do either AP or IB classes or both at BCC-- it only really "matters" if your kid wants to do the IB diploma program, which means they need specific requirements (sign up for a certain number of IB classes etc). Some classes are actually cross-registered as both IB and AP.