Anonymous wrote:I think it is best for kids to choose a language that they enjoy learning. What do the kids do if they pick an "easy" language, and the "understanding" teacher leaves and they end up with a harder teacher trying to learn a language that they don't even like?
And honestly, German, Japanese and Russian are some of the hardest languages to master, so if these classes are easy at TJ, are we sure that our kids will be able to attain fluency?
Anonymous wrote:I thought some people took Russian and was easy at TJ
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just so everyone doesn't get scared away - my DC got through TJ Spanish 2, 3 & AP with A's - so it can be done.
Sure, it can be done, but should it? It seems like part of making TJ work, at least for us, is picking our battles. Whether to test out of a math or CS class. AP physics or APUSH vs honors versions? AP Calc AB vs BC? Summer school chemistry to take the AP version? Sure there have been kids who have taken the harder path every time and gotten a 4.0. But the vast majority of TJ kids succeed, in part, by making smart choices in course selection. Goodness knows we have gotten enough "Dear TJ community" emails about this. So if language is not a passion for your kid, and if they are not unusually strong in it, why choose this particular battle?
. Every kid has own strengths and weaknesses and they know it better than even parents sometimes. If you as parent think Spanish is hard, it may not be the case for your kid. I do not favor any particular language but if you are not the native speaker then any language could be hard to learn. keep in mind, every child has different potential and one kid/parent's experience doesn't fit all.
. And know your kid and what they can handle.Anonymous wrote:Just so everyone doesn't get scared away - my DC got through TJ Spanish 2, 3 & AP with A's - so it can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Just so everyone doesn't get scared away - my DC got through TJ Spanish 2, 3 & AP with A's - so it can be done.
Anonymous wrote:Skip Spanish unless there is a specific reason to get it. TJ Spanish goes out of it's way to be difficult. Which would not be an issue, except that they seem to take pride in giving low grades, and the class isn't weighted. IME! Spanish I is fine, but but Spanish II is brutal. Lots of kid bailing into online Spanish III.
BTW-- Spanish III is the only not AP foreign language class offered online at TJ (except the full Korean sequence, because Korean is not offered at TJ). This gives kids who suffer through Spanish III a chance to bail out of TJ Spanish after Spanish II. The fact TJ gave up and started allowing kids to do this to get their 3rd year of Spanish without sitting through a TJ version of the class, and for Spanish only, should tell you everything you need to know about the TJ Spanish program.
You have been warned...