Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t have a right to treat high school as the lowest priority and then get upset when people call you out on it.
You do if you are a recruited athlete. I did not read the whole thread but that is a valid reason to miss school.
No, you don’t.
Parent of a recruited athlete who prioritizes school
+1. A student who attended our high school a few years ago (I'm going light on details here so as not to reveal them) competed at an international level throughout high school, including the Olympics, and was the class valedictorian. I'm guessing they had no problem finding a teacher to write a glowing LOR.
Anonymous wrote:“Travel” isn’t a valid reason to miss class as a junior in high school. I wouldn’t recommend her either.
+1. A student who attended our high school a few years ago (I'm going light on details here so as not to reveal them) competed at an international level throughout high school, including the Olympics, and was the class valedictorian. I'm guessing they had no problem finding a teacher to write a glowing LOR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t have a right to treat high school as the lowest priority and then get upset when people call you out on it.
You do if you are a recruited athlete. I did not read the whole thread but that is a valid reason to miss school.
No, you don’t.
Parent of a recruited athlete who prioritizes school
Anonymous wrote:You don’t have a right to treat high school as the lowest priority and then get upset when people call you out on it.
You do if you are a recruited athlete. I did not read the whole thread but that is a valid reason to miss school.
Anonymous wrote:You don’t have a right to treat high school as the lowest priority and then get upset when people call you out on it.
You do if you are a recruited athlete. I did not read the whole thread but that is a valid reason to miss school.
Anonymous wrote:Her absences were excused but the teacher probably wasn’t happy that sports and a vacation took priority over her education.
You don’t have a right to treat high school as the lowest priority and then get upset when people call you out on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If this was a national level competition, missing school is unavoidable as scheduling is set by a national federation and results/points often affect national ranking and championship eligibility.
I taught at a DC private and had a student who was the top athlete in the us who went on to be a 3x Olympian. She traveled multiple times a semester, usually internationally. She was one of my best students. Super organized, polite, planned ahead, emailed me questions while away etc.
Don’t let that teacher write her rec. it won’t benefit your kid.
Of course, for this applicant the college could care less about the LOR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD asked her AP Computer Science Principles teacher (from last year) to write her a letter of recommendation. She is applying to very selective colleges as a computer science major, so as you can imagine, this letter would have been an important part of her application.
However, the teacher said she would not be willing to write it since DD missed class a lot last year. Due to a combination of her sport, a family emergency, and travel, DD missed a significant amount of school in her junior year, but all her absences were excused and she explained this to the teacher. I'm really surprised the teacher would act like this- we are at a large public (not magnet). DD got an A in the class and is obviously passionate about the subject, and thought the teacher liked her. It's really surprising, and not fair.
DD was counting on this letter, and she doesn't know who to ask and what to do. Any advice? She is getting a letter from her AP Comp teacher as well, but it won't be strong since that's not her favorite subject.
Her favorite subject (and yours) seems to be Travel & Making Excuses.
Sick burn brah![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD asked her AP Computer Science Principles teacher (from last year) to write her a letter of recommendation. She is applying to very selective colleges as a computer science major, so as you can imagine, this letter would have been an important part of her application.
However, the teacher said she would not be willing to write it since DD missed class a lot last year. Due to a combination of her sport, a family emergency, and travel, DD missed a significant amount of school in her junior year, but all her absences were excused and she explained this to the teacher. I'm really surprised the teacher would act like this- we are at a large public (not magnet). DD got an A in the class and is obviously passionate about the subject, and thought the teacher liked her. It's really surprising, and not fair.
DD was counting on this letter, and she doesn't know who to ask and what to do. Any advice? She is getting a letter from her AP Comp teacher as well, but it won't be strong since that's not her favorite subject.
Her favorite subject (and yours) seems to be Travel & Making Excuses.
Anonymous wrote:DD asked her AP Computer Science Principles teacher (from last year) to write her a letter of recommendation. She is applying to very selective colleges as a computer science major, so as you can imagine, this letter would have been an important part of her application.
However, the teacher said she would not be willing to write it since DD missed class a lot last year. Due to a combination of her sport, a family emergency, and travel, DD missed a significant amount of school in her junior year, but all her absences were excused and she explained this to the teacher. I'm really surprised the teacher would act like this- we are at a large public (not magnet). DD got an A in the class and is obviously passionate about the subject, and thought the teacher liked her. It's really surprising, and not fair.
DD was counting on this letter, and she doesn't know who to ask and what to do. Any advice? She is getting a letter from her AP Comp teacher as well, but it won't be strong since that's not her favorite subject.