Anonymous wrote:Which sports are less competitive to join? My DS enjoys tennis, but has never played competitively. Or how is golf for a beginner?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds amazing, and what I want for DS! How is P.E. at tj? With the above description, I’m thinking not too stressful for my non athletic DS?
The PE classes are as academically rigorous as PE classes can be. The grades are based on written exams. It's actually kind of BS that kids have to memorize the tournament roles for badminton and the international governing body for ultimate frizbee and stuff like that.
Are you joking about memorizing ultimate frisbee and badminton rules?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds amazing, and what I want for DS! How is P.E. at tj? With the above description, I’m thinking not too stressful for my non athletic DS?
The PE classes are as academically rigorous as PE classes can be. The grades are based on written exams. It's actually kind of BS that kids have to memorize the tournament roles for badminton and the international governing body for ultimate frizbee and stuff like that.
My kid did both 9th and 10th PE at TJ with no issues. But apparently there is one teacher who is a bit demanding but not all that bad.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of people start crew that never did it before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds amazing, and what I want for DS! How is P.E. at tj? With the above description, I’m thinking not too stressful for my non athletic DS?
The PE classes are as academically rigorous as PE classes can be. The grades are based on written exams. It's actually kind of BS that kids have to memorize the tournament roles for badminton and the international governing body for ultimate frizbee and stuff like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds amazing, and what I want for DS! How is P.E. at tj? With the above description, I’m thinking not too stressful for my non athletic DS?
The PE classes are as academically rigorous as PE classes can be. The grades are based on written exams. It's actually kind of BS that kids have to memorize the tournament roles for badminton and the international governing body for ultimate frizbee and stuff like that.
Anonymous wrote:Parent of current student. I don't know of anything that they do that would help nurture leadership or communication skills other than the group work projects and the presentations.
However, my socially quiet student has become more outgoing because there are possibly (probably?) more introverted students at TJ than at our base school. So it has given them a bit more space to speak up on their terms.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds amazing, and what I want for DS! How is P.E. at tj? With the above description, I’m thinking not too stressful for my non athletic DS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ turns quiet, nerdy introverts into confident, capable leaders. Over 130 clubs and countless leadership, coordination, and officer roles to fill. Many opportunities for nerds to step up, and they take on the challenge without hesitation. Many of the competition/contest events, holiday celebrations, and the flagship iNite organized by TJ Namaste student group, are all managed by nerds with many hundreds of participants and are organized with impressive professionalism.
Hahahaha! You wish.
I see it turn quiet introverted kids into verbally competitive kids about academics. Yes there are tons of clubs, but they merely serve to be listed on college applications.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLBPfulqH1fWrE8EkZTpJz-1I-NTR4oE4g&feature=shared
Seem to be much more than academics
It is. Yes there are academic ECs but also many other non-academic ones.