Anonymous wrote:Do you want to learn or do you just want an A?
Anonymous wrote:What no one is answering is WHY is TJ hellbent on making Spanish so difficult? Don't they have to follow the curriculum the county decides? Who heads up the Spanish department there? Is this some sort of power trip? It doesn't make sense for a STEM focused school to do this. Has anyone talked to the head of the department or the principal to get a better understanding for why it is this way for this particular language? I took five years of Spanish when I went through middle and high school in FCPS and was also president of the Spanish Honor Society my senior year . and while AP Spanish was rigorous the lower level classes were not and they fully prepared me for the AP levels and what's more let me enjoy the language and want to pursue the higher levels. I really don't know what's up with TJ here. Is it a power trip? Sounds like it.
Anonymous wrote:What no one is answering is WHY is TJ hellbent on making Spanish so difficult? Don't they have to follow the curriculum the county decides? Who heads up the Spanish department there? Is this some sort of power trip? It doesn't make sense for a STEM focused school to do this. Has anyone talked to the head of the department or the principal to get a better understanding for why it is this way for this particular language? I took five years of Spanish when I went through middle and high school in FCPS and was also president of the Spanish Honor Society my senior year . and while AP Spanish was rigorous the lower level classes were not and they fully prepared me for the AP levels and what's more let me enjoy the language and want to pursue the higher levels. I really don't know what's up with TJ here. Is it a power trip? Sounds like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has absolutely nothing to do with fluency. It has everything to do with understanding very obscure Spanish grammar rules that even native speakers don't understand.
My kid failed this test twice:
https://www.lawlessspanish.com/grammar/verbs/preterito-vs-imperfecto/
He git super easy As in Spanish at base school.
My kid got a 4/6 in this. Is this the level in Spanish 3 at Tj?
Anonymous wrote:It has absolutely nothing to do with fluency. It has everything to do with understanding very obscure Spanish grammar rules that even native speakers don't understand.
My kid failed this test twice:
https://www.lawlessspanish.com/grammar/verbs/preterito-vs-imperfecto/
He git super easy As in Spanish at base school.
Anonymous wrote:The goal is to actually learn a language, fluently. Many language classes at TJ share that goal. My DC took French through AP and she still practices daily and speaks it well. I have heard the same about TJ Spanish. The students graduate knowing a second (or third, fourth…) language. Don’t miss the opportunity to learn a language because it’s “hard.”
Anonymous wrote:It has absolutely nothing to do with fluency. It has everything to do with understanding very obscure Spanish grammar rules that even native speakers don't understand.
My kid failed this test twice:
https://www.lawlessspanish.com/grammar/verbs/preterito-vs-imperfecto/
He git super easy As in Spanish at base school.
Anonymous wrote:Understand the implications of stopping after three credits of Spanish or any language and not pursuing a fourth. Research online and read articles about how important a fourth year of language study is or isn’t, when it comes to college admissions
https://www.google.com/search?q=four+years+of+same+foreign+language+college+admissions