Anonymous wrote:I have an 8th grader and we're struggling to get hours. I'd love to know how your child got 150 already. We do 2 hours each weekend. Because of his age, I have to accompany him.
Anonymous wrote:Our child graduated from MCPS in 2022 with 1500 + SSL hours. No doubt in my mind that those hours, along with 4 years of high school leadership activities, is what got child accepted to UMD. Many classmates with higher GPAs and more AP classes were rejected. Universities (even huge ones like Maryland) need students who will participate in campus life. A high number of SSL hours shows commitment to involvement in one’s community. It matters. We require all our children to complete at least enough SSL hours to earn the “purple tassel”. Colleges are so wildly competitive these days, strong academics just are not enough.
Anonymous wrote:I have an 8th grader and we're struggling to get hours. I'd love to know how your child got 150 already. We do 2 hours each weekend. Because of his age, I have to accompany him.
T5Anonymous wrote:Our child graduated from MCPS in 2022 with 1500 + SSL hours. No doubt in my mind that those hours, along with 4 years of high school leadership activities, is what got child accepted to UMD. Many classmates with higher GPAs and more AP classes were rejected. Universities (even huge ones like Maryland) need students who will participate in campus life. A high number of SSL hours shows commitment to involvement in one’s community. It matters. We require all our children to complete at least enough SSL hours to earn the “purple tassel”. Colleges are so wildly competitive these days, strong academics just are not enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC, a 7th grader has around 150 hours of SSL so far. I read on MCPS that 260+ hours of SSL in senior year will be awarded. Beyond that, will that have any impact in school or college admissions. His friends have already over 400 hours and I would like to understand what impact it has. Could anyone enlighten please
No and anyone telling you otherwise has no idea what they are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sophomore has about 200 hours from various places. The impact is on her personality…she has had different experiences and has developed empathy beyond what I think we could have taught her. So don’t think about what those ssl hours can do for your kid, think about what your kid can do for the community.
I agree. SSL opportunities allowe my kids many new experiences outside of the classroom/school. It's been good for them to be out in the world. One will likely get to 260, and the other will be at around 200.
Over 50 hours were built into the school curriculum [30 in middle school and a little over 20 in high school (so far)]
Anonymous wrote:My sophomore has about 200 hours from various places. The impact is on her personality…she has had different experiences and has developed empathy beyond what I think we could have taught her. So don’t think about what those ssl hours can do for your kid, think about what your kid can do for the community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an 8th grader and we're struggling to get hours. I'd love to know how your child got 150 already. We do 2 hours each weekend. Because of his age, I have to accompany him.
I feel like the schools hand them out constantly. 10 hours for outdoor Ed, 10 hours for something else related to their history class. Bringing in bags for a project, hours. They’re not even helping the community. I get that it’s good for kids whose parents can’t take them to do hours, but as long as your kid turns in all his hours as he goes along and keeps an eye out for opportunities, you’ll be fine