Anonymous wrote:9th grade DD, who is a smart honors student, has had two terrible English teachers in a row (9th and 8th grade - both with frequent absences, almost weekly, and phone it in the rest of the time), end of 6th grade and all of 7th was Covid even though the teachers were fine. The terrible teachers are easy graders and DD gets A's, probably to disguise their lack of teaching.
For a variety of reasons we don't want to leave the school (plus no guarantees of a good teacher if we leave.)
So would you get a private English tutor in this case? DD is very worried that she is not being properly prepared for college and beyond by these do-nothing teachers. DD is a strong reader and reads regularly for fun, but does not feel like she is getting proper writing instruction. We don't even really know what else she should be learning that she is not.
WWYD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CTY writing classes were very good for my kids. You can stuff them in at the end of summer. It’s expensive but financial aid is offered.
OP here. Is it sleepaway at Hopkins or day student? It would be too far for day student unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CTY writing classes were very good for my kids. You can stuff them in at the end of summer. It’s expensive but financial aid is offered.
OP here. Is it sleepaway at Hopkins or day student? It would be too far for day student unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:CTY writing classes were very good for my kids. You can stuff them in at the end of summer. It’s expensive but financial aid is offered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - thanks for all these great ideas, especially the homeschool course and summer program ideas. DD is smart and motivated so I think those options could potentially work.
OP, it sounds like you got the advice you needed. You and your DD are wise to recognize that students in classes with frequently absent teachers often don't get the instruction they deserve. It's an ugly secret of public education, documented in studies showing lower performance for students of teachers with poor attendance. I wish I had understood this when my kids were younger and had teachers who were experiencing issues that prevented them from being in the classroom regularly. I'm not judging the absences, but those years set my kids back and I should have done more to fill in the blanks.