Anonymous wrote:Is it that time of year again when people post these stories in the hopes of scaring off a few and creating more waitlist movement?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it that time of year again when people post these stories in the hopes of scaring off a few and creating more waitlist movement?
It does seem like that. I don't know anyone who dislikes it or is doing poorly there so these stories are not the norm, but they do seem to be working harder than most other high schoolers.
Well I know my kid isn't alone. Kid saw another kid with cuts on their arm, told me, I called multiple people at the school and was told, literally, by a counselor, that self harm is no big deal. "It's not like it's a s**cide attempt. For real? I was totally speechless with that interaction.
I have a really hard time believing this is true.
The time my daughter made a joke in class about killing herself, the teacher reported it to the counselor, who phoned me to come get her immediately and initially didn't want her back until she'd had the all clear by a psychologist. DD had to reiterate that she'd made a joke in poor taste before the counselor relented. It was a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mental health trumps everything else. Remember TJ is a long four years and your kids compete agaibst other TJ kids. It's rough.
Lack of Middle school math proficiency is primary cause for stress.
Kid was in Geometry and scored perfect on the SOL which I've never heard of.
I don't think you're understanding. Kid has mastered the material but needs to complete answers in 2-3min based on time allotted and currently completes in 3-4 min. No joke. That's the pace.
Where are getting this data? Did you go time at the test?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps your child would have had a hard time no matter what, OP. Maybe high school is revealing some executive functioning flaws or latent anxiety and depression, and they're realizing that they're a small fish in a big pond.
And that's fine. They'll have to learn that lesson anyway at some point - in college, or their workplaces, etc. If they learn it now, it's fine. Just make sure you provide plenty of support and encouragement at home.
It's probably not that. TJ presents extraordinarily high levels of rigor. Like college levels of rigor. All any non STEM kids (and a good chunk of the stem kids) coming out of TJ if college was easier it harder than high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it that time of year again when people post these stories in the hopes of scaring off a few and creating more waitlist movement?
It does seem like that. I don't know anyone who dislikes it or is doing poorly there so these stories are not the norm, but they do seem to be working harder than most other high schoolers.
Well I know my kid isn't alone. Kid saw another kid with cuts on their arm, told me, I called multiple people at the school and was told, literally, by a counselor, that self harm is no big deal. "It's not like it's a s**cide attempt. For real? I was totally speechless with that interaction.
I was with you until this.
The counselors pretty much ONLY care about this.
Your kid's is struggling and getting Cs for the first time in their life, no problem. Your kid's has no idea how to apply for college, no problem. Your kid doesn't know what classes they should take, no problem. Your kid is cutting themselves, they go pretty nuclear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it that time of year again when people post these stories in the hopes of scaring off a few and creating more waitlist movement?
It does seem like that. I don't know anyone who dislikes it or is doing poorly there so these stories are not the norm, but they do seem to be working harder than most other high schoolers.
Well I know my kid isn't alone. Kid saw another kid with cuts on their arm, told me, I called multiple people at the school and was told, literally, by a counselor, that self harm is no big deal. "It's not like it's a s**cide attempt. For real? I was totally speechless with that interaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mental health trumps everything else. Remember TJ is a long four years and your kids compete agaibst other TJ kids. It's rough.
Lack of Middle school math proficiency is primary cause for stress.
Kid was in Geometry and scored perfect on the SOL which I've never heard of.
I don't think you're understanding. Kid has mastered the material but needs to complete answers in 2-3min based on time allotted and currently completes in 3-4 min. No joke. That's the pace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it that time of year again when people post these stories in the hopes of scaring off a few and creating more waitlist movement?
It does seem like that. I don't know anyone who dislikes it or is doing poorly there so these stories are not the norm, but they do seem to be working harder than most other high schoolers.
Well I know my kid isn't alone. Kid saw another kid with cuts on their arm, told me, I called multiple people at the school and was told, literally, by a counselor, that self harm is no big deal. "It's not like it's a s**cide attempt. For real? I was totally speechless with that interaction.
This is not consistent with our experience. We were impressed with the care the social worker and psychologist gave to the kids when an issue was shared. But staffing may have changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mental health trumps everything else. Remember TJ is a long four years and your kids compete agaibst other TJ kids. It's rough.
Lack of Middle school math proficiency is primary cause for stress.
Anonymous wrote:Mental health trumps everything else. Remember TJ is a long four years and your kids compete agaibst other TJ kids. It's rough.
Anonymous wrote:Dramatic yes, but man. My kid is just worn out. Between a few bad apple teachers, poor instructions or lesson planning, crazy time expectations make classes that were once loved just not loved at all.
I no longer have a happy, intellectually curious kid. Fwiw kid found a great friend group, loves other aspects of the school. But I'm worried long term this is more brow-beating than building up.
Apparently a friend with straight As confided that they are leaving next year for the same reason.
Anyone btdt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it that time of year again when people post these stories in the hopes of scaring off a few and creating more waitlist movement?
Looking for actual advice. I don't care about the wait list besides the fact that people have already accepted/ declined at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps your child would have had a hard time no matter what, OP. Maybe high school is revealing some executive functioning flaws or latent anxiety and depression, and they're realizing that they're a small fish in a big pond.
And that's fine. They'll have to learn that lesson anyway at some point - in college, or their workplaces, etc. If they learn it now, it's fine. Just make sure you provide plenty of support and encouragement at home.