Anonymous wrote:NP here. I have no idea if OP is a troll, but I most certainly am not and this topic is one I've been thinking about generally for our DS who is 12.
1. he intensely dislikes attending school (at a NWDC independent) because it is slow-paced and monotonous and confining. I can see his point
2. he is intensely curious in a broad array of subjects ranging from 19th century art to building a better 3D printer that can mimic live human tissue better than current technology allows
3. He is strange and has never found his tribe among his same-age peers, after 9 years of exposure, but he LOVES adults and they tend to like him back.
I wonder: why can't he "homeschool" at around ~ 15 y.o. with a sampling of live subject matter tutors (calc), online national classes for the "mandatory" subjects (English composition?) and ... travel? independent research internships like the kids get at Montgomery Blair? and as PP said, college classes to round out the week.
Look, DS has been asking already and if this continues into HS, I'm going to consider seriously letting him "drop out" and go alternative. He'll learn and accomplish more, not less, of this I have no doubt. The only thing that gives me pause is how top engineering departments, say, might view this alternate path when they do get his application at age 20 (vs. 18).
-- not a troll, really
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. I have no idea if OP is a troll, but I most certainly am not and this topic is one I've been thinking about generally for our DS who is 12.
1. he intensely dislikes attending school (at a NWDC independent) because it is slow-paced and monotonous and confining. I can see his point
2. he is intensely curious in a broad array of subjects ranging from 19th century art to building a better 3D printer that can mimic live human tissue better than current technology allows
3. He is strange and has never found his tribe among his same-age peers, after 9 years of exposure, but he LOVES adults and they tend to like him back.
I wonder: why can't he "homeschool" at around ~ 15 y.o. with a sampling of live subject matter tutors (calc), online national classes for the "mandatory" subjects (English composition?) and ... travel? independent research internships like the kids get at Montgomery Blair? and as PP said, college classes to round out the week.
Look, DS has been asking already and if this continues into HS, I'm going to consider seriously letting him "drop out" and go alternative. He'll learn and accomplish more, not less, of this I have no doubt. The only thing that gives me pause is how top engineering departments, say, might view this alternate path when they do get his application at age 20 (vs. 18).
-- not a troll, really
4. he
Both of my kids will probably skip the last two years of high school and start college early, either at a community college or a residential school that admits students after their sophomore year. The last two years of college are a waste of time, IMHO.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. I have no idea if OP is a troll, but I most certainly am not and this topic is one I've been thinking about generally for our DS who is 12.
1. he intensely dislikes attending school (at a NWDC independent) because it is slow-paced and monotonous and confining. I can see his point
2. he is intensely curious in a broad array of subjects ranging from 19th century art to building a better 3D printer that can mimic live human tissue better than current technology allows
3. He is strange and has never found his tribe among his same-age peers, after 9 years of exposure, but he LOVES adults and they tend to like him back.
I wonder: why can't he "homeschool" at around ~ 15 y.o. with a sampling of live subject matter tutors (calc), online national classes for the "mandatory" subjects (English composition?) and ... travel? independent research internships like the kids get at Montgomery Blair? and as PP said, college classes to round out the week.
Look, DS has been asking already and if this continues into HS, I'm going to consider seriously letting him "drop out" and go alternative. He'll learn and accomplish more, not less, of this I have no doubt. The only thing that gives me pause is how top engineering departments, say, might view this alternate path when they do get his application at age 20 (vs. 18).
-- not a troll, really
4. he
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks. That is what I was afraid of.
Anonymous wrote:I think the upcoming sophomore year of private high school may be the last one I pay for for my free spirit DS. Then I may turn him loose to get a GRE when he feels like it. We live in DC. Will the DC bureaucrats leave me alone if I do that or will they threaten to put me in jail if I don't try to get him into a junior year?