Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone know if you can double block for Alg 1 and Geometry at Banneker?
No.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone know if you can double block for Alg 1 and Geometry at Banneker?
Anonymous wrote:If your child did the advanced track math at Deal (i.e. Algebra II and Geometry in 8th grade) and had to repeat one of those later, could you please share what that did to the HS GPA?
We keep hearing that it "counts for the high school GPA" but I don't really understand what that means or what the impact is.
Anonymous wrote:A relayed question: are kids able to double block math at jR? My 7th grader did algebra this year but said they fucnt want to double block gif next year, which seemed fine to us at the time , so they are taking just geo, not Alg 2, in 8th. But now I’m wondering if they won’t regret being in the most advanced group. I don’t question whether they could handle the workload.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC did well enough on the geometry assessment to be allowed to take Algebra 1 and Geometry simultaneously next year (8th grade).
From parents of students who went this route, how big a lift did it turn out to be for your student?
This would imply Algebra 2 in 9th, Pre-Calculus in 10th and AP Calc BC in 11th. Make sure you have a path beyond that (dual enrollment, multivariable calculus or linear algebra) in whichever school your child goes after Deal.
Also get a tutor to make sure you kid knows the materials that were skipped over the years. Do not rely on the fact that your kid got an A and "tested in" to the advanced track. Learned this this hard way.
+ 1000
All A's in MS Math at Deal only to squeak by in math in 9th grade. There were a bunch of gaps that getting full credit for handing in assignments at Deal did not help the process.
Oh my gosh. This 1000%. Only do this if your kid does math in their spare time or you have time to get a textbook and teach them. My kids did the Deal math track (high As), went on to private high schools, had to repeat Algebra 2 (one kid) and geometry (second kid) and struggled to get Bs. Almost all the material was new to them, despite taking the Deal courses IN THE SAME SUBJECTS.
Buyer beware. Deal math is exceedingly weak.
OP here - yeah, I was amazed how many topics weren’t covered in 8th grade math. Happily, I can tutor the kids in math, although will need to brush up on MV calculus if they get to that point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC did well enough on the geometry assessment to be allowed to take Algebra 1 and Geometry simultaneously next year (8th grade).
From parents of students who went this route, how big a lift did it turn out to be for your student?
This would imply Algebra 2 in 9th, Pre-Calculus in 10th and AP Calc BC in 11th. Make sure you have a path beyond that (dual enrollment, multivariable calculus or linear algebra) in whichever school your child goes after Deal.
Also get a tutor to make sure you kid knows the materials that were skipped over the years. Do not rely on the fact that your kid got an A and "tested in" to the advanced track. Learned this this hard way.
+ 1000
All A's in MS Math at Deal only to squeak by in math in 9th grade. There were a bunch of gaps that getting full credit for handing in assignments at Deal did not help the process.
Oh my gosh. This 1000%. Only do this if your kid does math in their spare time or you have time to get a textbook and teach them. My kids did the Deal math track (high As), went on to private high schools, had to repeat Algebra 2 (one kid) and geometry (second kid) and struggled to get Bs. Almost all the material was new to them, despite taking the Deal courses IN THE SAME SUBJECTS.
Buyer beware. Deal math is exceedingly weak.
Anonymous wrote:I would (and did) discourage double blocking at Deal. No regrets. There are not a lot of long-term benefits to doing Geometry in 8th, and even fewer to doing Algebra II. It’s more important to build a strong foundation in algebra than to race through the foundational math as fast as possible. There’s no clear benefit in college admissions. Private and Catholic schools are mostly holding the line at geometry in 9th. A lot of Deal students who take Algebra II in 8th, who go to high schools with placement exams, wind up taking it over again. (And a lot of students who take calculus in high school take it over again in college, too.)
Also, 8th grade art was great.
Anonymous wrote:If your child did the advanced track math at Deal (i.e. Algebra II and Geometry in 8th grade) and had to repeat one of those later, could you please share what that did to the HS GPA?
We keep hearing that it "counts for the high school GPA" but I don't really understand what that means or what the impact is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC did well enough on the geometry assessment to be allowed to take Algebra 1 and Geometry simultaneously next year (8th grade).
From parents of students who went this route, how big a lift did it turn out to be for your student?
This would imply Algebra 2 in 9th, Pre-Calculus in 10th and AP Calc BC in 11th. Make sure you have a path beyond that (dual enrollment, multivariable calculus or linear algebra) in whichever school your child goes after Deal.
Also get a tutor to make sure you kid knows the materials that were skipped over the years. Do not rely on the fact that your kid got an A and "tested in" to the advanced track. Learned this this hard way.
+ 1000
All A's in MS Math at Deal only to squeak by in math in 9th grade. There were a bunch of gaps that getting full credit for handing in assignments at Deal did not help the process.
Oh my gosh. This 1000%. Only do this if your kid does math in their spare time or you have time to get a textbook and teach them. My kids did the Deal math track (high As), went on to private high schools, had to repeat Algebra 2 (one kid) and geometry (second kid) and struggled to get Bs. Almost all the material was new to them, despite taking the Deal courses IN THE SAME SUBJECTS.
Buyer beware. Deal math is exceedingly weak.