Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Who says it's over-doing and not normal-doing?
Sometimes is is normal (or appropriate) doing, but far too many parents try to push this on their kids who aren't advanced or prodigies in hopes of turning them into one. It doesn't work.
I'm all for advanced math programs for the kids who needs them to keep their minds engaged and who have a deep interest in math that isn't being met at school. But many parents push these programs on the wrong kids and cause more harm than help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Who says it's over-doing and not normal-doing?
Sometimes is is normal (or appropriate) doing, but far too many parents try to push this on their kids who aren't advanced or prodigies in hopes of turning them into one. It doesn't work.
I'm all for advanced math programs for the kids who needs them to keep their minds engaged and who have a deep interest in math that isn't being met at school. But many parents push these programs on the wrong kids and cause more harm than help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
but seems a lot more plausible than doing nothing let's face it prep makes a big difference
No one's saying prep doesn't help.
This thread's title is suggesting that enrolling in these programs will buy admission into an Ivy League. It won't.
Anonymous wrote:
but seems a lot more plausible than doing nothing let's face it prep makes a big difference
Anonymous wrote:
Who says it's over-doing and not normal-doing?
Anonymous wrote:At the tender age of 7, while most kids were learning to ride bikes and play video games, Natalia Latuskiewcz was pondering early principles of multiplication and algebra two hours per week in her Russian math class.
“I thought my daughter could do more than what she was offered [in school],” her mother, Anna Latuskiewcz, told The Post. The 44-year-old Stanford alum, who works as a data scientist and investor, enrolled Natalia in the Russian School of Mathematics seven years ago, paying $3,000 for the tutoring — on top of $30,000 annually for tuition at an all-girls private elementary school.
“If she wants to be a doctor, an engineer — math will never hurt. Her math will increase the understanding of the world,” said the mom of four who lives in Medina, Washington. “The sky is the limit.”
The latest must-have for well-to-do parents eager to give their children any and every advantage is Russian math classes. They utilize a method that was developed in the Soviet Union during the Cold War and prioritize reasoning, critical thinking and abstract principals over brute memorization. Companies offering the instruction are seeing a boom in enrollment as wealthy families look to infiltrate the Ivy League.
https://nypost.com/2023/02/20/russian-math-classes-are-the-new-must-for-wealthy-kids/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some reason, former Soviets - and a lot of Chinese - have an iron-clad belief that studying calculus in 3rd grade will get their snowflake into the Ivies. If these people are so smart as they claim to be, you'd think they'd figure out of the rules of the game by now.![]()
Yup. They are missing the new admissions criteria.
Yea, unless they are first gen, or won some big academic contest, it's not happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, overdoing math enrichment at an early age does not equate to future Ivy League admission. Silly title.
Who says it's over-doing and not normal-doing?
In 5 years those same parents will be complaining that Jr. Is bored in math class and they genuinely will think that it's the school's problem
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some reason, former Soviets - and a lot of Chinese - have an iron-clad belief that studying calculus in 3rd grade will get their snowflake into the Ivies. If these people are so smart as they claim to be, you'd think they'd figure out of the rules of the game by now.![]()
Yup. They are missing the new admissions criteria.
Anonymous wrote:At the tender age of 7, while most kids were learning to ride bikes and play video games, Natalia Latuskiewcz was pondering early principles of multiplication and algebra two hours per week in her Russian math class.
“I thought my daughter could do more than what she was offered [in school],” her mother, Anna Latuskiewcz, told The Post. The 44-year-old Stanford alum, who works as a data scientist and investor, enrolled Natalia in the Russian School of Mathematics seven years ago, paying $3,000 for the tutoring — on top of $30,000 annually for tuition at an all-girls private elementary school.
“If she wants to be a doctor, an engineer — math will never hurt. Her math will increase the understanding of the world,” said the mom of four who lives in Medina, Washington. “The sky is the limit.”
The latest must-have for well-to-do parents eager to give their children any and every advantage is Russian math classes. They utilize a method that was developed in the Soviet Union during the Cold War and prioritize reasoning, critical thinking and abstract principals over brute memorization. Companies offering the instruction are seeing a boom in enrollment as wealthy families look to infiltrate the Ivy League.
https://nypost.com/2023/02/20/russian-math-classes-are-the-new-must-for-wealthy-kids/
Anonymous wrote:For some reason, former Soviets - and a lot of Chinese - have an iron-clad belief that studying calculus in 3rd grade will get their snowflake into the Ivies. If these people are so smart as they claim to be, you'd think they'd figure out of the rules of the game by now.![]()