Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there finals for the health class? What kind of assignment do they have?
No final exam. Lots of small worksheets, short-response essays (a paragraph or two), a little research project to find resources online and put together a short presentation. Stuff like that. Nothing individually difficult, but a LOT of small assignments, typically 3-5 to do in between each online session.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My student took health (easy but time consuming) and honors Precalculus (very challenging since it’s already a hard class, made harder by being compressed and accelerated in the summer). Yes, mandatory attendance for the synchronous meetings.
Was your child retaking Honors Precalculus over the summer or for the first time?
Sorry, this was my child and I’m just seeing these questions now. DC had been in accelerated math in elementary, then attended a private school with no math acceleration for MS but is talented in math and was bored silly in 9th grade Honors Geometry and in Honors Algebra 1 in 10th. Earned an A in summer Honors Precalc and now is finishing up Calc AB as a junior.
Impressive your child took it for the first time over the summer and earned an A. Was this online through the central office?
Yes, and it was really tough. Very challenging to do without a cohort of classmates to study alongside. It’s the hardest I’ve ever seen DC work for school, and they shed some tears of relief at the end. But it was totally self driven and they’re still glad they did it. Will probably major in math in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My student took health (easy but time consuming) and honors Precalculus (very challenging since it’s already a hard class, made harder by being compressed and accelerated in the summer). Yes, mandatory attendance for the synchronous meetings.
Was your child retaking Honors Precalculus over the summer or for the first time?
Sorry, this was my child and I’m just seeing these questions now. DC had been in accelerated math in elementary, then attended a private school with no math acceleration for MS but is talented in math and was bored silly in 9th grade Honors Geometry and in Honors Algebra 1 in 10th. Earned an A in summer Honors Precalc and now is finishing up Calc AB as a junior.
Impressive your child took it for the first time over the summer and earned an A. Was this online through the central office?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My student took health (easy but time consuming) and honors Precalculus (very challenging since it’s already a hard class, made harder by being compressed and accelerated in the summer). Yes, mandatory attendance for the synchronous meetings.
Was your child retaking Honors Precalculus over the summer or for the first time?
Sorry, this was my child and I’m just seeing these questions now. DC had been in accelerated math in elementary, then attended a private school with no math acceleration for MS but is talented in math and was bored silly in 9th grade Honors Geometry and in Honors Algebra 1 in 10th. Earned an A in summer Honors Precalc and now is finishing up Calc AB as a junior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The math classes are a lot of work even if you already know/understand the math, and they go very fast. If you don't keep up with the daily assignments, you will be hopelessly in the hole within a few days.
May I ask which Math class? My son has to repeat algebra 1, and Math is not his strong suit at all. I'm worried about an online class moving quickly and him not asking questions as he should and getting too far behind...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My student took health (easy but time consuming) and honors Precalculus (very challenging since it’s already a hard class, made harder by being compressed and accelerated in the summer). Yes, mandatory attendance for the synchronous meetings.
Was your child retaking Honors Precalculus over the summer or for the first time?