Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got recommended by my teacher.
you or your child??
Anonymous wrote:I just got recommended by my teacher.
Anonymous wrote:I am new to this. I wanted my son to be in advanced math to take Algebra next year which is 8th. Are we bad moms by pushing them? His last school he did very well but not perfect. He had a 3.5 in math. I am just scared about setting him up for failure. It is advanced 7th math.
Anonymous wrote:I am new to this. I wanted my son to be in advanced math to take Algebra next year which is 8th. Are we bad moms by pushing them? His last school he did very well but not perfect. He had a 3.5 in math. I am just scared about setting him up for failure. It is advanced 7th math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find that students in the AAP program that don't pass all of the requirements ARE or AREN'T ready, and the general education students that do pass all of the tests AREN'T ready. If the General Students can't pass a CogAt test, how will they survive Algebra 1 HN?
And where do you get this data?
My DS, who turned down AAP to stick with an immersion program, was placed in honors Algebra as an 7th grader, (so he did his pre-algebra earlier and in a different language) got As and is getting As in Honor Geometry. There is actually a slight downside, for IB students, since you can't take the IB HL exams as a junior. (and don't start slamming IB, please note we are an immersion family, and need IB to go to college overseas)
Sorry can't do. Thanks for adding another reason in my book to get rid of IB at most schools. Why do parents think this is some sort of private school to get their child into an overseas college! Have four IB schools -North, South, East, and West and be done with the program besides these.
Anonymous wrote:We attended the Lake Braddock rising 7th-grader orientation last week and were told that the SOL criteria was a perfect score, not just pass advanced. Does anyone know of LB students who took Honors Algebra without a perfect SOL score?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find that students in the AAP program that don't pass all of the requirements ARE or AREN'T ready, and the general education students that do pass all of the tests AREN'T ready. If the General Students can't pass a CogAt test, how will they survive Algebra 1 HN?
And where do you get this data?
My DS, who turned down AAP to stick with an immersion program, was placed in honors Algebra as an 7th grader, (so he did his pre-algebra earlier and in a different language) got As and is getting As in Honor Geometry. There is actually a slight downside, for IB students, since you can't take the IB HL exams as a junior. (and don't start slamming IB, please note we are an immersion family, and need IB to go to college overseas)
Sorry can't do. Thanks for adding another reason in my book to get rid of IB at most schools. Why do parents think this is some sort of private school to get their child into an overseas college! Have four IB schools -North, South, East, and West and be done with the program besides these.