Anonymous wrote:You take it through virtual Virginia. Aps used to offer it over the summer before covid so maybe they will return to that again one day.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you! That answers it. Any idea if it can be completed asynchronously? The calendar seems like it could be a summer buster otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is a freshman in Alg2/trig at W-L. She says several of her classmates took Geometry over the summer. She says they are doing fine. The only carryover from Geometry to this year is the trigonometry, but that's the easiest part of the class. If you kid is willing to commit to 6 weeks of intense studying this summer, I think it's a good idea if the goal is getting to calculus by senior year.
It feels very wrong that kids are taking summer classes b/c the expectations in HS are too much for how much time they have. Summer school used to be for remediation. The whole system is out of control.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is a freshman in Alg2/trig at W-L. She says several of her classmates took Geometry over the summer. She says they are doing fine. The only carryover from Geometry to this year is the trigonometry, but that's the easiest part of the class. If you kid is willing to commit to 6 weeks of intense studying this summer, I think it's a good idea if the goal is getting to calculus by senior year.
It feels very wrong that kids are taking summer classes b/c the expectations in HS are too much for how much time they have. Summer school used to be for remediation. The whole system is out of control.
Anonymous wrote:My DD is a freshman in Alg2/trig at W-L. She says several of her classmates took Geometry over the summer. She says they are doing fine. The only carryover from Geometry to this year is the trigonometry, but that's the easiest part of the class. If you kid is willing to commit to 6 weeks of intense studying this summer, I think it's a good idea if the goal is getting to calculus by senior year.
Anonymous wrote:
There's no shame in starting calculus in college, or there shouldn't be.
Anonymous wrote:Through Virtual Virginia, as others described - but please know it is a significant commitment, several hours per day, synchronous, and there is very little flexibility with absences. They'll drop a kid without remorse after a few absences, and keep your money. It's no joke.
But reach out to the counselor now to get it on the counselor's radar, because that's the person who helps you sign up, and there's a deadline to register coming up.