Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately your daughter has had poor pre-college guidance, OP. It seems like finding an online class is her best option at this point.
Is this NCS? That’s the only school I’ve heard recent complaints about not having enough sections of core science classes for seniors to get the classes they want, and while I don’t know current graduation requirements, when I was there back in the Stone Age you could graduate with no physics.
PP again. I was curious so I looked up the requirements for NCS and they do require physics. In fact it’s the only one they require, although they recommend all three: “ To meet the science requirement for graduation, students must take two full-year courses, one of which must be a year of physics. The department recommends that students take a full year of physics, chemistry, and biology.”
So OP’s DD is not at NCS.
Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately your daughter has had poor pre-college guidance, OP. It seems like finding an online class is her best option at this point.
Is this NCS? That’s the only school I’ve heard recent complaints about not having enough sections of core science classes for seniors to get the classes they want, and while I don’t know current graduation requirements, when I was there back in the Stone Age you could graduate with no physics.
Anonymous wrote:Physics is required in my kids' high school and everyone takes it the same year. It's impossible not to take it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did your DD avoid taking physics? Usually everybody in private required to take it at some point.
LOL not true at all.
Not all privates are close to equal.
Religious ones are some of the least educated centers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately your daughter has had poor pre-college guidance, OP. It seems like finding an online class is her best option at this point.
Is this NCS? That’s the only school I’ve heard recent complaints about not having enough sections of core science classes for seniors to get the classes they want, and while I don’t know current graduation requirements, when I was there back in the Stone Age you could graduate with no physics.
Is this still a problem there (not enough room in science classes)? I thought they would have fixed this by now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need a science class for a possible planned major? What major and what college?
My child needs physics for a nursing major - the school sequence was thrown off as they took AP Chem jr year on the advice of a classmate
Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately your daughter has had poor pre-college guidance, OP. It seems like finding an online class is her best option at this point.
Is this NCS? That’s the only school I’ve heard recent complaints about not having enough sections of core science classes for seniors to get the classes they want, and while I don’t know current graduation requirements, when I was there back in the Stone Age you could graduate with no physics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did your DD avoid taking physics? Usually everybody in private required to take it at some point.
LOL not true at all.
Not all privates are close to equal.
Religious ones are some of the least educated centers.
Anonymous wrote:How did your DD avoid taking physics? Usually everybody in private required to take it at some point.
Anonymous wrote:Self-study for the AP exam.