Anonymous wrote:We did Math Olympiad, which is offered from Grade 4 to 8 at our independent. Great to have it offered right after school. Our independent sends kids interested in STEM to MIT, Stanford, CalTech etc. for university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like there have been a ton of posts about weak private school math is and I can’t tell if it’s just one person constantly bringing it up.
Truth is that, excepting STEM magnet schools, the US is just not strong at tea hing math.
Public or private does not make a significant difference either. If schools truly were good at this, then the NWEA, NAEP, and PiSA math scores all would be much better. Further, if schools really were good at math instruction then AoPS, Kumon, Mathnasium, and RSM would not be able to stay in business.
Most families going to these companies aren’t going for remedial instruction— they are going there to get ahead. So they’d always be in business no matter how well teacher is instructing the class.
Most students in the US score poorly in math because they don’t understand the point of learning math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like there have been a ton of posts about weak private school math is and I can’t tell if it’s just one person constantly bringing it up.
Truth is that, excepting STEM magnet schools, the US is just not strong at tea hing math.
Public or private does not make a significant difference either. If schools truly were good at this, then the NWEA, NAEP, and PiSA math scores all would be much better. Further, if schools really were good at math instruction then AoPS, Kumon, Mathnasium, and RSM would not be able to stay in business.
Anonymous wrote:Related question for current grade 3. Mine tested into Math 3 at AOPS. If she continues in this track (Math 3 in grade 3, Math 4 in grade 4) she will just be on grade level at school? Should we be trying to jump ahead a year in AOPS over the summer if she wants to place into higher math in a few years? There is no differentiation or tracking in math at school right now.
Anonymous wrote:RSM. All private school kids do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone have experience with Johns Hopkins CTY? I've thought of using their algebra and geometry classes to accelerate my kids when the time comes. Granted I've got a long time before then (my kindergartener is complaining that at school they aren't working on the addition and subtraction that we're doing at home...).
Anonymous wrote:I feel like there have been a ton of posts about weak private school math is and I can’t tell if it’s just one person constantly bringing it up.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like there have been a ton of posts about weak private school math is and I can’t tell if it’s just one person constantly bringing it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have him do the 9th grade preview class at St. Alban’s. They offer great summer math classes.
+1. Also, public school kids are accelerated in name only. Most of their classes breeze through material. Lots of breadth. No depth.