Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Name your private high school and how much homework your kids typically get. We are applying from Hardy this upcoming year and we keep hearing 3 to 4 hours a night at the big three… Which sounds absolutely ridiculous. They’re in school all day don’t these kids get a break? The studies show that all that homework doesn’t get better outcomes so why are the schools especially some that are more progressive continue with us if it is true? Curious minds want to know. ( And now I’m definitely not gonna send my kid to the new school which is why we are on this section of the website.)
It is true and my kids had to do it and it wouldn’t be fair to now change it. That is how it is at certain schools. If they don’t appeal to you don’t apply. Don’t forget they don’t get home from sports until late as well at many schools so it’s a full day. Once again there are other options for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown Prep: 3-4 hours of homework (reading, writing and review) a night. Sometimes more and sometimes less. Then 2-3 hours of practice for sports.
So Georgetown Prep has as much work as a big 3? Is this true of Gonzaga as well?
What makes you so surprised about this? Do you really think GDS is just miraculously more rigorous that GPrep? What makes you think that? What measurements are you using?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown Prep: 3-4 hours of homework (reading, writing and review) a night. Sometimes more and sometimes less. Then 2-3 hours of practice for sports.
So Georgetown Prep has as much work as a big 3? Is this true of Gonzaga as well?
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown Prep: 3-4 hours of homework (reading, writing and review) a night. Sometimes more and sometimes less. Then 2-3 hours of practice for sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These kids are working harder than they ever will for the rest of their lives, unless they go to med school. Why put them through that? Do you go to work all day and then play a sport and then come home and do several more hours of work? It’s crazy.
I actually don't think that is true. Most of them aren't working harder than their parents.
This. Do you not know what it’s like to work in biglaw? It is an all consuming life with vacations canceled or rescheduled.
This. I work harder in a week than my kid does in a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These kids are working harder than they ever will for the rest of their lives, unless they go to med school. Why put them through that? Do you go to work all day and then play a sport and then come home and do several more hours of work? It’s crazy.
I actually don't think that is true. Most of them aren't working harder than their parents.
This. Do you not know what it’s like to work in biglaw? It is an all consuming life with vacations canceled or rescheduled.
NCS is pretty much always 3 hours night for girls who do well. They don't have homework in every class, every night because classes are on a rotating basis. But the cumulative each night is about 3 hours.
STA is 2-3 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These kids are working harder than they ever will for the rest of their lives, unless they go to med school. Why put them through that? Do you go to work all day and then play a sport and then come home and do several more hours of work? It’s crazy.
I actually don't think that is true. Most of them aren't working harder than their parents.
Anonymous wrote:These kids are working harder than they ever will for the rest of their lives, unless they go to med school. Why put them through that? Do you go to work all day and then play a sport and then come home and do several more hours of work? It’s crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like it is hard to pull out the truth on these threads. There seems to be people who feel that if they don't round up the hw hours that people will look down on their schools and they will not seem as elite.
What you forget is that there is a large range of GPAs at these schools. There are kids who get straight As (exceedingly rare), and kids who get straight Cs and everyone in between. I would say that almost all the high schoolers are INTELLECTUALLY capable of doing the work but how much studying they choose to do varies a lot. My daughter has friends who study 4-5 hours a night for straight As and friends who have firm limits on how much they will study and are fine with Bs.
It's really quite possible that if you asked 2 different families at a school about how much their kid studies, you would get 2 completely different replies. Within my daughter's 8 person friend group there is a large spread.