Anonymous wrote:Can a student take two languages concurrently? Let's say they started Spanish 1 in 7th and add Chinese in 9th. Can they take up to Spanish 6 and Chinese 4 if the HS offers to Level 4?
Anonymous wrote:Can a student take two languages concurrently? Let's say they started Spanish 1 in 7th and add Chinese in 9th. Can they take up to Spanish 6 and Chinese 4 if the HS offers to Level 4?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I noticed on the class registration form for Blair SMCS that Chinese was listed, which is new.
It is? I looked all over the Blair website while we were waiting to hear, and didn't think to look at the class registration form! That's great!
-- not OP
it listed Chinese 1-3 though so not sure how that would work for someone coming from an MS that offered it
I guess you could repeat Chinese 3 and hope they add 4 and AP later
or maybe they have 4 and AP but didn't think those were options for 9th graders?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I noticed on the class registration form for Blair SMCS that Chinese was listed, which is new.
It is? I looked all over the Blair website while we were waiting to hear, and didn't think to look at the class registration form! That's great!
-- not OP
it listed Chinese 1-3 though so not sure how that would work for someone coming from an MS that offered it
I guess you could repeat Chinese 3 and hope they add 4 and AP later
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I noticed on the class registration form for Blair SMCS that Chinese was listed, which is new.
It is? I looked all over the Blair website while we were waiting to hear, and didn't think to look at the class registration form! That's great!
-- not OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid is likely going to a magnet where their middle school language (Mandarin) is not offered. They are really worried about this hurting their chances for getting into college (they'd start Spanish 1 in 9th).
Is this actually going to hurt? I said no but now I am second guessing.
Are there options I don't know about to allow them to continue Mandarin (like a virtual class held during a free period or something)?
They are good at Mandarin for not being Chinese, and they would not change languages of their own volition.
And finally, how does one get a class created? There are enough kids from the current Chinese 2 class at their middle school that there might be 7-8 kids in the same boat.
Nobody cares. You are overthinking this. The only college that requires 4 years of language is Harvard. Please do not make your kid go through a year of summer school to catch up.
+1. 4 years of Spanish (w/ good grades) is fine.
If you're really concerned about it you can work the growing up in Asia and learning Chinese into a main or supplemental essay or the diversity Q so it will be clear that Spanish is a 3rd language. That's actually quite impressive.
My concern as a parent of a kid who was interested in Asia as part of work in the future would be how to maintain or progress in Chinese without daily instruction for 4 years. Consider summer language programs - immersion or otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:I noticed on the class registration form for Blair SMCS that Chinese was listed, which is new.
Anonymous wrote:I noticed on the class registration form for Blair SMCS that Chinese was listed, which is new.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid is likely going to a magnet where their middle school language (Mandarin) is not offered. They are really worried about this hurting their chances for getting into college (they'd start Spanish 1 in 9th).
Is this actually going to hurt? I said no but now I am second guessing.
Are there options I don't know about to allow them to continue Mandarin (like a virtual class held during a free period or something)?
They are good at Mandarin for not being Chinese, and they would not change languages of their own volition.
And finally, how does one get a class created? There are enough kids from the current Chinese 2 class at their middle school that there might be 7-8 kids in the same boat.
Nobody cares. You are overthinking this. The only college that requires 4 years of language is Harvard. Please do not make your kid go through a year of summer school to catch up.
Anonymous wrote:No answer for your question. But can the adults of students taking Mandarin please explain the interest in Mandarin. Why go to a HS to take it if the MS can't offer the language, is it worth taking Mandarin? For what reasons other than learning another language?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid is likely going to a magnet where their middle school language (Mandarin) is not offered. They are really worried about this hurting their chances for getting into college (they'd start Spanish 1 in 9th).
Is this actually going to hurt? I said no but now I am second guessing.
Are there options I don't know about to allow them to continue Mandarin (like a virtual class held during a free period or something)?
They are good at Mandarin for not being Chinese, and they would not change languages of their own volition.
And finally, how does one get a class created? There are enough kids from the current Chinese 2 class at their middle school that there might be 7-8 kids in the same boat.
Nobody cares. You are overthinking this. The only college that requires 4 years of language is Harvard. Please do not make your kid go through a year of summer school to catch up.