Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child doesn't pass, pick a new language for next year. You only need two years of language and it doesn't have to be the same one for each year.
while 2 years may be the requirement, most colleges want to see 3 years of a language and that it is the same language so they see the progression of difficulty. retake spanish II. Many kids do this and it is not a problem.
+1 OP, assuming your child will go to college he will have to take a language at some point. I currently teach at UMD (and before at 2 private universities) and many students struggle with college language requirements because they didn't take at least 2 years of the same language before college. On the other hand, I have advised students that didn't need to take language classes because they already earned the credits by high school and can take at least 4 classes in another area of interest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child doesn't pass, pick a new language for next year. You only need two years of language and it doesn't have to be the same one for each year.
while 2 years may be the requirement, most colleges want to see 3 years of a language and that it is the same language so they see the progression of difficulty. retake spanish II. Many kids do this and it is not a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the feedback. I Just need more clarification, if you skip the final and it's not on the HS transcript, can you take another language or does it Have to be the same class? This might be a silly question.[/quote
It does not have to be the same class. This is what we did for my oldest. He then took French 1 the following year.
Anonymous wrote:If your child doesn't pass, pick a new language for next year. You only need two years of language and it doesn't have to be the same one for each year.