Anonymous wrote:My middle child, a 2024 grad, had a very positive experience with Japanese at South Lakes. He was not an immersion student, so I was worried, especially as I had only studied Romance languages myself, so would be no help. Through his Japanese work at SLHS, and the encouragement of his teacher, he was nominated for and attended governor’s world languages academy for Japanese last summer. He’s starting college next year majoring in Asian studies. Japanese was his strongest teacher connection in high school. Just sharing another experience.Anonymous wrote:I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
Another problem at Carson is kids coming from Fox Mill did Japanese, but the Japanese teachers at RCMS and SLHS are very bad, and unless you are one of the kids who speaks Japanese at home, these teachers will actively drive kids away from wanting to speak Japanese. Then they are challenged if they want to switch languages in 8th or 9th grade. The only way around it is to do a summer class in the new language.
I haven’t seen any diploma numbers at SLHS. There aren’t that many kids there trying to do IB, but the ones who start generally finish as far as I can tell.
Anonymous wrote:My middle child, a 2024 grad, had a very positive experience with Japanese at South Lakes. He was not an immersion student, so I was worried, especially as I had only studied Romance languages myself, so would be no help. Through his Japanese work at SLHS, and the encouragement of his teacher, he was nominated for and attended governor’s world languages academy for Japanese last summer. He’s starting college next year majoring in Asian studies. Japanese was his strongest teacher connection in high school. Just sharing another experience.Anonymous wrote:I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
Another problem at Carson is kids coming from Fox Mill did Japanese, but the Japanese teachers at RCMS and SLHS are very bad, and unless you are one of the kids who speaks Japanese at home, these teachers will actively drive kids away from wanting to speak Japanese. Then they are challenged if they want to switch languages in 8th or 9th grade. The only way around it is to do a summer class in the new language.
I haven’t seen any diploma numbers at SLHS. There aren’t that many kids there trying to do IB, but the ones who start generally finish as far as I can tell.
My middle child, a 2024 grad, had a very positive experience with Japanese at South Lakes. He was not an immersion student, so I was worried, especially as I had only studied Romance languages myself, so would be no help. Through his Japanese work at SLHS, and the encouragement of his teacher, he was nominated for and attended governor’s world languages academy for Japanese last summer. He’s starting college next year majoring in Asian studies. Japanese was his strongest teacher connection in high school. Just sharing another experience.Anonymous wrote:I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
Another problem at Carson is kids coming from Fox Mill did Japanese, but the Japanese teachers at RCMS and SLHS are very bad, and unless you are one of the kids who speaks Japanese at home, these teachers will actively drive kids away from wanting to speak Japanese. Then they are challenged if they want to switch languages in 8th or 9th grade. The only way around it is to do a summer class in the new language.
I haven’t seen any diploma numbers at SLHS. There aren’t that many kids there trying to do IB, but the ones who start generally finish as far as I can tell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought students only started IB courses in 11th grade? But yes, language is a big part of IB.
I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought students only started IB courses in 11th grade? But yes, language is a big part of IB.
You have to have 5 years of a language to earn the IB diploma and it has to be the same language. This is something that any Counselor at a school sending kids to an IB school should be telling parents. Any Counselor at an IB HS should be making sure that kids and parents are wll aware of this.
It sounds like OP’s kid had 2 years of a language in MS and got a B in the third year of the language at HS. The student was more worried about the letter grade and switched languages as a Sophomore. Now they can only get 3 years in the same language which makes them ineligible for the IB Diploma. Mom says she was not paying close enough attention due to issues at the time and has just realized this. The Counselor should have been that conversation with the student when it happened. We don’t know if the student was told that and ignored it or if the student wasn’t told that. Either way, the language requirement is something that sinks a decent number of kids for the IB Diploma.
I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
+1 this is one reason we don’t rely on counselors for anything
We had the same conversation with one of the counselors at Robinson when my daughter transferred there for 8th grade. I knew about it from reading this board so I was insistent that she take a world language. Counselor told us "Of course it's not a requirement to start a language in 8th, what would the kids do who are coming from schools outside the county who don't have the opportunity to take a language in middle school." That's a direct quote. I tried to tell him about the 5 years for the diploma and he said I had misunderstood.
Anonymous wrote:I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
Another problem at Carson is kids coming from Fox Mill did Japanese, but the Japanese teachers at RCMS and SLHS are very bad, and unless you are one of the kids who speaks Japanese at home, these teachers will actively drive kids away from wanting to speak Japanese. Then they are challenged if they want to switch languages in 8th or 9th grade. The only way around it is to do a summer class in the new language.
I haven’t seen any diploma numbers at SLHS. There aren’t that many kids there trying to do IB, but the ones who start generally finish as far as I can tell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought students only started IB courses in 11th grade? But yes, language is a big part of IB.
You have to have 5 years of a language to earn the IB diploma and it has to be the same language. This is something that any Counselor at a school sending kids to an IB school should be telling parents. Any Counselor at an IB HS should be making sure that kids and parents are wll aware of this.
It sounds like OP’s kid had 2 years of a language in MS and got a B in the third year of the language at HS. The student was more worried about the letter grade and switched languages as a Sophomore. Now they can only get 3 years in the same language which makes them ineligible for the IB Diploma. Mom says she was not paying close enough attention due to issues at the time and has just realized this. The Counselor should have been that conversation with the student when it happened. We don’t know if the student was told that and ignored it or if the student wasn’t told that. Either way, the language requirement is something that sinks a decent number of kids for the IB Diploma.
I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
+1 this is one reason we don’t rely on counselors for anything
I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought students only started IB courses in 11th grade? But yes, language is a big part of IB.
You have to have 5 years of a language to earn the IB diploma and it has to be the same language. This is something that any Counselor at a school sending kids to an IB school should be telling parents. Any Counselor at an IB HS should be making sure that kids and parents are wll aware of this.
It sounds like OP’s kid had 2 years of a language in MS and got a B in the third year of the language at HS. The student was more worried about the letter grade and switched languages as a Sophomore. Now they can only get 3 years in the same language which makes them ineligible for the IB Diploma. Mom says she was not paying close enough attention due to issues at the time and has just realized this. The Counselor should have been that conversation with the student when it happened. We don’t know if the student was told that and ignored it or if the student wasn’t told that. Either way, the language requirement is something that sinks a decent number of kids for the IB Diploma.
I know parents whose kids are going to an SLHS from Carson who have not been told about the IB requirement and are upset when they learn about it as Freshmen or Sophomores. The Carson literature on language that I saw for rising 7th graders mentioned the IB requirement on the backside of the language info sheet that was given out. It was one line and not highlighted. The video that was released for rising 7th graders encouraged kids to not take a foreign language in 7th grade, because it was a high school class, and strongly suggested that waiting until 9th grade was a good idea for most students. It did not mention that kids going to SLHS need to start the language in 8th grade if they think they want to earn the IB Diploma. I would bet that the language requirement and the crap Counseling from Carson is a part of the reason why IB Diploma numbers at SLHS are low.
Anonymous wrote:I thought students only started IB courses in 11th grade? But yes, language is a big part of IB.
Anonymous wrote:“That’s one of the problems with IB,”
It’s not really an IB problem. Colleges prefer to see 4 years of the same language not 1 or 2 years of one and 2 or 3 years of another, even if you’re not in IB.
This kid could have fixed the issue and done the IB diploma if they’d gotten on top of it soon enough. They didn’t, and that’s not an IB problem.
Anonymous wrote:Take the IB classes to get the college credits, grades and overall rigor matter more than the actual IB diploma. This also allows him to skip TOK, CAS, and the extended essay if he wants. Make up for it with an extra HL class or two.
Anonymous wrote:I thought students only started IB courses in 11th grade? But yes, language is a big part of IB.
Anonymous wrote:“That’s one of the problems with IB,”
It’s not really an IB problem. Colleges prefer to see 4 years of the same language not 1 or 2 years of one and 2 or 3 years of another, even if you’re not in IB.
This kid could have fixed the issue and done the IB diploma if they’d gotten on top of it soon enough. They didn’t, and that’s not an IB problem.