Anonymous wrote:For the fact he’s already complaining about the grinding and make you question yourself if this is the right decision - maybe regular program with regular amount of works work better for him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As stated above, the actual IB program doesn’t start until 11th grade. There are pre-reqs, of course. But if he didn’t get a spot at WL, what is he regretting? The intensified & AP classes at Wakefield & WL are going to be the same amount of work— freshman and sophomore year will be essentially the same at any APS school if you’re taking the same classes.
And he can apply again for IB for 10th grade.
So if the IB program does not start until 11 can kids who are on that track (lottery) take AP classes in grade 9 and 10 ?
Anonymous wrote:As stated above, the actual IB program doesn’t start until 11th grade. There are pre-reqs, of course. But if he didn’t get a spot at WL, what is he regretting? The intensified & AP classes at Wakefield & WL are going to be the same amount of work— freshman and sophomore year will be essentially the same at any APS school if you’re taking the same classes.
And he can apply again for IB for 10th grade.
Anonymous wrote:As with a lot of things, I suspect the instinct of the teachers is to scare their students into taking the new school seriously, "whip them into shape," and establish a high baseline of expectations. This is normal, especially for the people entering the school who are coming from a bunch of different places. It's easier to set a high baseline and back off later than it is to try to go easy on them and ramp up. You should tell your child that it's normal to feel overwhelmed, stick with it, and develop strategies to manage these feelings, like thinking about it in manageable blocks rather than one giant mass of stuff to do that all has to be done at once.
Children and adults are both extremely adaptable. It is our privilege as parents that children like to make sure you know they are being forced to adapt every step of the wayListen to it, but have faith that they will get there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the fact he’s already complaining about the grinding and make you question yourself if this is the right decision - maybe regular program with regular amount of works work better for him.
Well there is the reality and where he wants to be. We are fine if he goes to a GMU or NOVA, and finds his path from that, but he has this hang up about proving himself and getting into a SLAC, thus the mismatch between goal and attitude at this juncture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you left public school because you wanted it to be harder but now that it’s harder you’re freaking out?
He’s freaking out. I’m claiming public school would be just as hard, if he had made it to WL IB.
Wakefield we were less certain about, because basically his cohort of nerdy kids all left, so unsure how peer effects would be (they went Wl IB, HBW, AT, or private — it was stark change socially). But is sounds like the Capstone program would also have loads of homework last week just like his private, so he can’t complain.
We also thought AT since it’s easier to get into for now, but DS is way more into humanities and is hoping for a SLAC for college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you left public school because you wanted it to be harder but now that it’s harder you’re freaking out?
He’s freaking out. I’m claiming public school would be just as hard, if he had made it to WL IB.
Wakefield we were less certain about, because basically his cohort of nerdy kids all left, so unsure how peer effects would be (they went Wl IB, HBW, AT, or private — it was stark change socially). But is sounds like the Capstone program would also have loads of homework last week just like his private, so he can’t complain.
We also thought AT since it’s easier to get into for now, but DS is way more into humanities and is hoping for a SLAC for college.
Anonymous wrote:For the fact he’s already complaining about the grinding and make you question yourself if this is the right decision - maybe regular program with regular amount of works work better for him.
Anonymous wrote:So you left public school because you wanted it to be harder but now that it’s harder you’re freaking out?
Anonymous wrote:Oh stop. You have no way of knowing this. We don't even know what private school it is. It could end up being an excellent fit for their DS. He just needs to give it more than a week.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As stated above, the actual IB program doesn’t start until 11th grade. There are pre-reqs, of course. But if he didn’t get a spot at WL, what is he regretting? The intensified & AP classes at Wakefield & WL are going to be the same amount of work— freshman and sophomore year will be essentially the same at any APS school if you’re taking the same classes.
And he can apply again for IB for 10th grade.
Most of his fellow nerdy classmates went to WL; we were worried he would never get into IB and the number of AP Capstone graduates is not published, so we thought IB was a big brain drain from Wakefield. So to hedge our bets of never winning IB lottery, DS went to a private school, but he is feeling that homework the first week is just signs that it’s a grind rather than actually rigorous.
Yea, you made a mistake. Wakefield is an excellent and caring school with a plenty big cohort of smart and driven kids.
Oh stop. You have no way of knowing this. We don't even know what private school it is. It could end up being an excellent fit for their DS. He just needs to give it more than a week.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As stated above, the actual IB program doesn’t start until 11th grade. There are pre-reqs, of course. But if he didn’t get a spot at WL, what is he regretting? The intensified & AP classes at Wakefield & WL are going to be the same amount of work— freshman and sophomore year will be essentially the same at any APS school if you’re taking the same classes.
And he can apply again for IB for 10th grade.
Most of his fellow nerdy classmates went to WL; we were worried he would never get into IB and the number of AP Capstone graduates is not published, so we thought IB was a big brain drain from Wakefield. So to hedge our bets of never winning IB lottery, DS went to a private school, but he is feeling that homework the first week is just signs that it’s a grind rather than actually rigorous.
Yea, you made a mistake. Wakefield is an excellent and caring school with a plenty big cohort of smart and driven kids.