Anonymous wrote:Yeah, better for all these kids to be hitting the books for 4-5 hours a night after a 7 hour school day and then having a nervous breakdown by high school. You people are nuts. Hey, OP, what's wrong with your bosses that you have time to post on DCUM whining about this? They not giving you enough work? People aren't supposed to have any free time, you know, they should always be busy. Or wait, do you just feel that way about your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, better for all these kids to be hitting the books for 4-5 hours a night after a 7 hour school day and then having a nervous breakdown by high school. You people are nuts. Hey, OP, what's wrong with your bosses that you have time to post on DCUM whining about this? They not giving you enough work? People aren't supposed to have any free time, you know, they should always be busy. Or wait, do you just feel that way about your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Which electives did your child choose? Perhaps they selected ones that are too easy for their skill level? As far as the core classes, you should make sure that your child is reading at least 1 hour per day after school from a high level book of your or their choosing. (Let me know if you would like suggestions for books.) Also, I would recommend that they do extra practice through Khan Academy for math. Perhaps 30 min per day? Your child should also be filling their free time with several hours of sports practice or exercise every day. Do they play an instrument?
Anonymous wrote:Which electives did your child choose? Perhaps they selected ones that are too easy for their skill level? As far as the core classes, you should make sure that your child is reading at least 1 hour per day after school from a high level book of your or their choosing. (Let me know if you would like suggestions for books.) Also, I would recommend that they do extra practice through Khan Academy for math. Perhaps 30 min per day? Your child should also be filling their free time with several hours of sports practice or exercise every day. Do they play an instrument?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, better for all these kids to be hitting the books for 4-5 hours a night after a 7 hour school day and then having a nervous breakdown by high school. You people are nuts. Hey, OP, what's wrong with your bosses that you have time to post on DCUM whining about this? They not giving you enough work? People aren't supposed to have any free time, you know, they should always be busy. Or wait, do you just feel that way about your kids.
There is a difference between wanting a higher level, more rigorous education for ones kids and just 5 hours of homework. FCPS is really missing the mark with MS.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, better for all these kids to be hitting the books for 4-5 hours a night after a 7 hour school day and then having a nervous breakdown by high school. You people are nuts. Hey, OP, what's wrong with your bosses that you have time to post on DCUM whining about this? They not giving you enough work? People aren't supposed to have any free time, you know, they should always be busy. Or wait, do you just feel that way about your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you should consider sending your kid to private school.
Most of the privates are much easier than FCPS AAP. We moved one from private back to FCPS and the curriculum in FCPS was far more challenging. Have heard the same from several others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you should consider sending your kid to private school.
Most of the privates are much easier than FCPS AAP. We moved one from private back to FCPS and the curriculum in FCPS was far more challenging. Have heard the same from several others.
10:43 here. When did this happen? Recently or years ago, and for 7th or 8th grade? I'm willing to see if things improve after the first quarter - maybe, like grade school, the first quarter is just a placeholder while everyone remembers how to do school after the summer and real learning starts in the second quarter. Is that the case?
Recently and we moved after 7th. 7th in private was much easier with far less acceleration. 8th in FCPS was better but not over the top challenging. If you are really worried about it, send them to BASIS and they can start taking AP classes in 8th grade. There is really no need for it though. They are kids and don't gain a lot by finishing differential equations in 11th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you should consider sending your kid to private school.
Most of the privates are much easier than FCPS AAP. We moved one from private back to FCPS and the curriculum in FCPS was far more challenging. Have heard the same from several others.
10:43 here. When did this happen? Recently or years ago, and for 7th or 8th grade? I'm willing to see if things improve after the first quarter - maybe, like grade school, the first quarter is just a placeholder while everyone remembers how to do school after the summer and real learning starts in the second quarter. Is that the case?
Anonymous wrote:This might be school and teacher dependent. DD is busy and engaged in MS for the most part. Math and English especially keep her on her toes. Science is an absolute travesty.
She rarely has homework because there is enough time built into her school day so she can finish assignments, and there is still enough time left over that she's unofficially tutoring a couple of friends. There are still so many quizzes and tests, she has to come home and do that work.