Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parental frustration comes from the fact that the child's math path for the rest of their time in MCPS is being decided based on a mysterious evaluation done when the kid is 8 years old. Now, in some clusters, they apparently will skip kids up into the advanced pathway in middle school. But in many clusters, the kid's math path is set at the end of third grade.
When I was a kid, the last chance for acceleration didn't happen until the end of 7th grade.
This is actually not a fact. It is an exaggerated fear not rooted in reality.
What is a fact: in my kid's middle school, sixth-grade kids were skipped up (to IM) and seventh-grade kids were skipped up (to Algebra I).
Anonymous wrote:What happens to the kids in lower elementary magnet schools who were doing accelerated math as early as 1st grade? Do they have to retest at 3rd?
Anonymous wrote:The trouble with not getting into compacted math is that if your kid is a fast learner, they are stuck in a class that teaches at a v...e...r...y.........s....l.....o......w pace. They get bored and frustrated and feel like they are wasting time. That is the problem for my child.
Anonymous wrote:
This is good to hear. They should probably send home a compacted math information and FAQ sheet at the beginning of 3rd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parental frustration comes from the fact that the child's math path for the rest of their time in MCPS is being decided based on a mysterious evaluation done when the kid is 8 years old. Now, in some clusters, they apparently will skip kids up into the advanced pathway in middle school. But in many clusters, the kid's math path is set at the end of third grade.
When I was a kid, the last chance for acceleration didn't happen until the end of 7th grade.
This is actually not a fact. It is an exaggerated fear not rooted in reality.
What is a fact: in my kid's middle school, sixth-grade kids were skipped up (to IM) and seventh-grade kids were skipped up (to Algebra I).
Anonymous wrote:In my child's school, they discouraged kids from applying to MS magnet programs if not in compacted. Funny because one magnet is Eastern which is about humanities, so math scores shouldn't matter.
Anonymous wrote:Parental frustration comes from the fact that the child's math path for the rest of their time in MCPS is being decided based on a mysterious evaluation done when the kid is 8 years old. Now, in some clusters, they apparently will skip kids up into the advanced pathway in middle school. But in many clusters, the kid's math path is set at the end of third grade.
When I was a kid, the last chance for acceleration didn't happen until the end of 7th grade.
Anonymous wrote:In my child's school, they discouraged kids from applying to MS magnet programs if not in compacted. Funny because one magnet is Eastern which is about humanities, so math scores shouldn't matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For myself I did not find out that my daughter was in Compacted Math until late August, there was a miscommunication. But I will say now that she is in it, thank goodness! It is that or else she would be bored beyond belief. I have twins in 2nd grade and I will push for one of them to get into it (I presume he will) since he already dislikes school and finds it "boring", especially math. It is for this reason that I assume some parents want their children selected.
+1. MY DC finds the current 3rd grade math homework to be boring, and finishes in 2 minutes. So I assume that DC could qualify for CM. However, if there are tons of kids that are even more advanced than my DC, there would presumably not be room for my DC. So this is my concern. I am not worried about my DC being better than the rest. Only that DC is challenged rather than bored.
So how does this work - they only take the top say 30 kids? Not all the ones that qualify? Why couldn't they have two classes of compacted math if they had enough kids? Sorry I'm ignorant on this subject. We have a second grader.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For myself I did not find out that my daughter was in Compacted Math until late August, there was a miscommunication. But I will say now that she is in it, thank goodness! It is that or else she would be bored beyond belief. I have twins in 2nd grade and I will push for one of them to get into it (I presume he will) since he already dislikes school and finds it "boring", especially math. It is for this reason that I assume some parents want their children selected.
+1. MY DC finds the current 3rd grade math homework to be boring, and finishes in 2 minutes. So I assume that DC could qualify for CM. However, if there are tons of kids that are even more advanced than my DC, there would presumably not be room for my DC. So this is my concern. I am not worried about my DC being better than the rest. Only that DC is challenged rather than bored.