Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The curriculum for language arts/social studies is amazing! It is the "old" curriculum (not 2.0) and I can't say enough amazing things about it. My child already had strong verbal skills and a large vocabulary but it is in a whole new ballpark now. My son's reading teacher at CCES is amazing!
Did you really use "amazing" three times in this paragraph? This post doesn't seem entirely real.
Anonymous wrote:I phrased it wrong. When I say the "old" curriculum, I don't meant that it will eventually replaced with a "new" curriculum. Rather, at the beginning of this school year, the language arts incorporated some aspects of curriculum 2.0. However, there were complaints from parents and teachers (from what I understand), therefore we got a notice mid-year saying that they were returning to the pre-2.0 language arts curriculum.
From a student/parent perspective, I thought the beginning of the year language arts were strong enough but I must say that the 2nd half of the year (after the change) they seem even more robust. My understanding is that this tried-and-true language arts curriculum will remain.
Frankly all the back and forth issues regarding 2.0 reminds us why we chose the HGC. The regular elementary schools don't have this freedom.
Anonymous wrote:The curriculum for language arts/social studies is amazing! It is the "old" curriculum (not 2.0) and I can't say enough amazing things about it. My child already had strong verbal skills and a large vocabulary but it is in a whole new ballpark now. My son's reading teacher at CCES is amazing!
Anonymous wrote:We've been happy with the peer group at CCES as well, but not the teachers. Out of four teachers, we have liked two. There is one teacher that has been the source of many, many parent and student complaints for years. Another is just so-so. We find the principal to be erratic and hard to deal with as well.
The curriculum for reading and writing is very good, but I'm not sure whether it is really much different than the home school, other than being more responsive to the kids' interests.
Anonymous wrote:The curriculum for language arts/social studies is amazing! It is the "old" curriculum (not 2.0) and I can't say enough amazing things about it. My child already had strong verbal skills and a large vocabulary but it is in a whole new ballpark now. My son's reading teacher at CCES is amazing!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I phrased it wrong. When I say the "old" curriculum, I don't meant that it will eventually replaced with a "new" curriculum. Rather, at the beginning of this school year, the language arts incorporated some aspects of curriculum 2.0. However, there were complaints from parents and teachers (from what I understand), therefore we got a notice mid-year saying that they were returning to the pre-2.0 language arts curriculum.
From a student/parent perspective, I thought the beginning of the year language arts were strong enough but I must say that the 2nd half of the year (after the change) they seem even more robust. My understanding is that this tried-and-true language arts curriculum will remain.
Frankly all the back and forth issues regarding 2.0 reminds us why we chose the HGC. The regular elementary schools don't have this freedom.
Really? I thought pre-2.0 curriculum was just temporary until "new" GT 2.0 one was rolled out...it was rolled not out quickly enough for teachers to use it this year, so that's why they went back to "old" system?
Anonymous wrote:PP, I'm curious what specifically you're seeing at the CC HGC to be so enthusiastic?
I have a child at the same center in the same grade, and I'm mostly reserving judgement on the program, though I'm not sorry we're there. My child is definitely happier with school than before. But I expected more, and am not enthusiastic about the teaching so far. I think some of my child's better experience at school is thanks to the peer group. Perhaps some of this is just that these Centers are so competitive to get into that we all get really high expectations.
Anonymous wrote:I phrased it wrong. When I say the "old" curriculum, I don't meant that it will eventually replaced with a "new" curriculum. Rather, at the beginning of this school year, the language arts incorporated some aspects of curriculum 2.0. However, there were complaints from parents and teachers (from what I understand), therefore we got a notice mid-year saying that they were returning to the pre-2.0 language arts curriculum.
From a student/parent perspective, I thought the beginning of the year language arts were strong enough but I must say that the 2nd half of the year (after the change) they seem even more robust. My understanding is that this tried-and-true language arts curriculum will remain.
Frankly all the back and forth issues regarding 2.0 reminds us why we chose the HGC. The regular elementary schools don't have this freedom.
Anonymous wrote:The curriculum for language arts/social studies is amazing! It is the "old" curriculum (not 2.0) and I can't say enough amazing things about it. My child already had strong verbal skills and a large vocabulary but it is in a whole new ballpark now. My son's reading teacher at CCES is amazing!