Anonymous wrote:For us Romeo and Juliet was a video. We had to buy the book ourselves. No book at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In most schools it is only Honors English 9A. A few schools may still have the on-level course, but that's rare. And there are no standards for what constitutes the honors version of the course. A kid could take it and read mostly below-grade level texts.
I wish I could figure out 9A vs H9A. My kid is in Bridge and he is enrolled in 9A and I’ve been told no H9A. I want someone to explain the difference. What is going on in the H9A class that warrants the extra .5 gpa bump? More in depth text analysis, more writing, higher expectations?
My kid has already complained that English is silly and it’s very easy. For now, I’m looking at outside tutoring.
Ugh, I'm sorry. There is no guidance as to how honors is different from regular. It's completely up to individual teachers. And given that people are saying that honors classes are including graphic novels, it doesn't sound like it's rigorous at many schools. Can you meet with the department head at your school to ask that he move up to honors?
Let’s not demonizes a book format that you clearly don’t understand. Just because a book is a graphic novel doesn’t mean it’s not worthy of inclusion in a honors class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In most schools it is only Honors English 9A. A few schools may still have the on-level course, but that's rare. And there are no standards for what constitutes the honors version of the course. A kid could take it and read mostly below-grade level texts.
I wish I could figure out 9A vs H9A. My kid is in Bridge and he is enrolled in 9A and I’ve been told no H9A. I want someone to explain the difference. What is going on in the H9A class that warrants the extra .5 gpa bump? More in depth text analysis, more writing, higher expectations?
My kid has already complained that English is silly and it’s very easy. For now, I’m looking at outside tutoring.
Ugh, I'm sorry. There is no guidance as to how honors is different from regular. It's completely up to individual teachers. And given that people are saying that honors classes are including graphic novels, it doesn't sound like it's rigorous at many schools. Can you meet with the department head at your school to ask that he move up to honors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In most schools it is only Honors English 9A. A few schools may still have the on-level course, but that's rare. And there are no standards for what constitutes the honors version of the course. A kid could take it and read mostly below-grade level texts.
I wish I could figure out 9A vs H9A. My kid is in Bridge and he is enrolled in 9A and I’ve been told no H9A. I want someone to explain the difference. What is going on in the H9A class that warrants the extra .5 gpa bump? More in depth text analysis, more writing, higher expectations?
My kid has already complained that English is silly and it’s very easy. For now, I’m looking at outside tutoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS is in 10th “honors” and they are reading/analyzing the Odyssey . It seems to vary by school and teacher I’m sure.
That's what mine did last year in 10th honors, but they read only excerpts, not the whole book.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is in 10th “honors” and they are reading/analyzing the Odyssey . It seems to vary by school and teacher I’m sure.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is in 10th “honors” and they are reading/analyzing the Odyssey . It seems to vary by school and teacher I’m sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In most schools it is only Honors English 9A. A few schools may still have the on-level course, but that's rare. And there are no standards for what constitutes the honors version of the course. A kid could take it and read mostly below-grade level texts.
I wish I could figure out 9A vs H9A. My kid is in Bridge and he is enrolled in 9A and I’ve been told no H9A. I want someone to explain the difference. What is going on in the H9A class that warrants the extra .5 gpa bump? More in depth text analysis, more writing, higher expectations?
My kid has already complained that English is silly and it’s very easy. For now, I’m looking at outside tutoring.