Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is taking it at woodson now and she doesn’t like it. She wishes she had opted for honors but not that combo.
Can you elaborate on why she does not like it? My cold will be at Woodson next year.
It is everyday with the same two teachers who don’t seem to like each other. She thinks her friends have better teachers in honors English and are doing cooler stuff. The tests are obscure facts and hard
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is taking it at woodson now and she doesn’t like it. She wishes she had opted for honors but not that combo.
Can you elaborate on why she does not like it? My cold will be at Woodson next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is taking it at woodson now and she doesn’t like it. She wishes she had opted for honors but not that combo.
Can you elaborate on why she does not like it? My cold will be at Woodson next year.
Anonymous wrote:My child is taking it at woodson now and she doesn’t like it. She wishes she had opted for honors but not that combo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child took the World Civilizations course at Chantilly High and did well after being in the AAP program in middle school.
The Language Arts and social studies teachers at my child's middle school prepared them well for the content of the World Civilizations course. It was understandably more challenging than the middle school courses were but my child faced a more noticeable challenge moving from AAP elementary school to AAP middle school than they did transitioning from middle school to high school because the writing demands were far more intense even in seventh and eighth grades. Elementary school didn't challenge my child to be a better writer, but middle school did and high school understandably had even higher expectations.
The teachers of the World Civilizations course were undeniably tough graders but they were not unfair. They made expectations clear, taught the content and process, provided feedback throughout the assignments and assessed accordingly. I believe my child who was enrolled in World Civilizations was better prepared for AP English than had been my older child who did not take the combined course.
How long ago was this? I have a 9th and 7th grader who went to Rocky Run, the AAP center for Chantilly, and they have done almost zero writing for middle school. And not much reading. In AAP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son came from AAP - and he and his friends all are taking english 9 honors now.
World civ honors sounds interesting but I think it's off the standard track if you're not taking it as an elective.
Is English 9 honors difficult coming from AAP?
Anonymous wrote:My child took the World Civilizations course at Chantilly High and did well after being in the AAP program in middle school.
The Language Arts and social studies teachers at my child's middle school prepared them well for the content of the World Civilizations course. It was understandably more challenging than the middle school courses were but my child faced a more noticeable challenge moving from AAP elementary school to AAP middle school than they did transitioning from middle school to high school because the writing demands were far more intense even in seventh and eighth grades. Elementary school didn't challenge my child to be a better writer, but middle school did and high school understandably had even higher expectations.
The teachers of the World Civilizations course were undeniably tough graders but they were not unfair. They made expectations clear, taught the content and process, provided feedback throughout the assignments and assessed accordingly. I believe my child who was enrolled in World Civilizations was better prepared for AP English than had been my older child who did not take the combined course.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son came from AAP - and he and his friends all are taking english 9 honors now.
World civ honors sounds interesting but I think it's off the standard track if you're not taking it as an elective.
Is English 9 honors difficult coming from AAP?
Generally, no. But everything is teacher dependent.
Is English 9 Honors difficult coming from regular English 8?