Anonymous wrote:I feel like it's good at being accelerated beyond the crappy public school elementary math curriculum, but I think they don't get deep into the conceptual understanding. So students can do a lot of impressive things for their age level, but I'm not convinced there is a really deep, fundamental understanding of what's happening and why.
Anonymous wrote:I called the Rockville branch for info a couple of months ago and they were hard sell on testing my child. I kept saying that I just wanted a basic overview of what was offered and generally, what times to see if it could even work. I ended-up with not a lot of info!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's another branch in North Bethesda/Rockville and an on-again/off-again branch in DC (the latter is off for now). It seems to be mostly the regular curriculum but accelerated and they have multiple levels (e.g. 5_1, 5_2 and 5_3 which is on level, accelerated and honors). They do assign regular homework, which is somewhat rote but seems to emphasize the concepts. The one downside, if you think it is a downside, is that the material hews closely to the regular school curriculum, rather than topics that are non-traditional (e.g. number theory, logic, discrete math etc.) which are well within the kids' grasp but not usually taught in schools.
My kids have been attending RSM-Reston over the past three years. Apart from one year (for one of them), they have taken the level 3 classes. Based on that, I disagree with the above statement regarding the RSM curriculum. In fact, I like how number theory was introduced at an early stage (and in an intuitive way).
My kid has been doing the same at North Bethesda and no, there have been no explicit number theory classes. Maybe some simple stuff like GCD and divisors but not much of modular arithmetic, Fermat's little theorem or Chinese Remainder Theorem, Euler's phi-function, Fundamental theorem of arithmetic or random stuff from Polya's "How to solve it". The local branches, unlike the Boston ones, don't set the math competition world on fire either. But it all depends on what you want out of such supplementation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's another branch in North Bethesda/Rockville and an on-again/off-again branch in DC (the latter is off for now). It seems to be mostly the regular curriculum but accelerated and they have multiple levels (e.g. 5_1, 5_2 and 5_3 which is on level, accelerated and honors). They do assign regular homework, which is somewhat rote but seems to emphasize the concepts. The one downside, if you think it is a downside, is that the material hews closely to the regular school curriculum, rather than topics that are non-traditional (e.g. number theory, logic, discrete math etc.) which are well within the kids' grasp but not usually taught in schools.
My kids have been attending RSM-Reston over the past three years. Apart from one year (for one of them), they have taken the level 3 classes. Based on that, I disagree with the above statement regarding the RSM curriculum. In fact, I like how number theory was introduced at an early stage (and in an intuitive way).
Anonymous wrote:There's another branch in North Bethesda/Rockville and an on-again/off-again branch in DC (the latter is off for now). It seems to be mostly the regular curriculum but accelerated and they have multiple levels (e.g. 5_1, 5_2 and 5_3 which is on level, accelerated and honors). They do assign regular homework, which is somewhat rote but seems to emphasize the concepts. The one downside, if you think it is a downside, is that the material hews closely to the regular school curriculum, rather than topics that are non-traditional (e.g. number theory, logic, discrete math etc.) which are well within the kids' grasp but not usually taught in schools.
Anonymous wrote:There's another branch in North Bethesda/Rockville and an on-again/off-again branch in DC (the latter is off for now). It seems to be mostly the regular curriculum but accelerated and they have multiple levels (e.g. 5_1, 5_2 and 5_3 which is on level, accelerated and honors). They do assign regular homework, which is somewhat rote but seems to emphasize the concepts. The one downside, if you think it is a downside, is that the material hews closely to the regular school curriculum, rather than topics that are non-traditional (e.g. number theory, logic, discrete math etc.) which are well within the kids' grasp but not usually taught in schools.