Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop comparing her to her friends. How do you even know what they are doing? I have a high schooler who went through AAP and I had no idea what his friends were doing or their grades. Stop making an effort to find out.
OP here. Her friends' moms are bragging how their kids get straight As. I say, oh, that's great, I think this and this assignment was really hard, they must have put in a lot of work. They say what assignment, we never did anything like that, we just had to do this other short thing. So, no, I'm not prying, but when it comes up, I ask questions.
DC had all 4s in younger elementary and a mix of 3s and 4s in older elementary. Her challenges were always there but her teachers never made a big deal out of them, as she is generally a very sweet kid who comes off really intelligent.
Just read another thread about parents pressurizing teachers for better grades and, well, this makes me twice as concerned.
Anonymous wrote:Stop comparing her to her friends. How do you even know what they are doing? I have a high schooler who went through AAP and I had no idea what his friends were doing or their grades. Stop making an effort to find out.
Anonymous wrote:DC is in the 7th grade AAP in a top-rated school. She is a B student in general. Sometimes Cs, sometimes As - very creative, but has difficulty sustaining attention, needs support in planning, time management etc. Also, she just doesn't care enough to put extra effort into her schoolwork. FWIW, she effortlessly tested into the program back in elementary.
I compare her assignments with what her friends in non-AAP programs are doing. The AAP ones - at least in this school- are by far more complex. They're generally open-ended, require quite a bit of research and, in my diletantic view, high-school level analytical thinking and writing skills. And I'm jealous. I see her friends making straight As, and I wonder if she would be better off in a program where you can score an easy A by filling in a simple worksheet. So how do I deal? What's the significance of middle school grades anyway? What will matter in the nearest few years - excellent GPA or what she can actually do?