Anonymous wrote:Looking back on it I don't think I consulted with my parents on this at all.
Anonymous wrote:As someone else pointed out, it won't kill her to be in French instead of Spanish although you do need discuss it as a family and come to an agreement about what level of communication you expect to give and receive about her education choices.
I would like to give some different food for thought ... As the parent of college and high school students, I have seen that choices in language courses do have some impact on college courses.
In my day all students in college were not required to take language; however, both of our college students have been required by their school to take 3 semesters of language unless they tested out of 1 semester. Therefore, it behooves students in middle school and high school to have an eye on the future and recognize that there is a nice benefit for them if they are already well-prepared for those 3 semesters.
Who knew that a choice they/we made in middle school would still be with them/us their sophomore year in college? Our children fell into Spanish and there they have stayed but if we had had more clarity about it I think we might have encouraged other choices in high school (Latin, for example).
The time has passed for different choices for our high school and college students but we will be paying a lot more attention when our 6 year-old gets to the stage where he has a choice about the language that he takes.
Just wanted to give you a perspective from the other end of the spectrum ... I hope it helps. I don't know if there is a 'right' answer about the language choice but clearly both your daughter and husband have opinions on it and they need to discuss those opinions and reach an agreement for going forward.
Anonymous wrote:My DH and I are having a disagreement and I'd like your opinion.
Our 6th grade DD is in middle school and can pick 3 electives (language, band, art, computer programming, drama etc). When she was transitioning from elementary to Middle school we discussed with her her options, she chose which ones she was interested in and that's what she enrolled in.
This spring she went ahead and chose her 3 electives without consulting her father or I. Her father is upset that she didn't tell us she was choosing and thinks we should weigh in on her choices (he's upset she switched from Spanish to French). I think her choosing by herself is fine. I would have liked her to discuss it with us but I like she has some freedom at a young age (7th grade) and can learn from her choices. He is really upset with her for not talking with us first and wants to let her know she shouldn't have done that (and that we should weigh in on her choices).
Good thing is we decided to sleep on it and talk it through again before we talk with her. What do you think - should she have consulted us? Should she be able to choose on her own without us weighing in? TIA!
Anonymous wrote:I didn't care what my child chose! It's an elective! Sometimes kids choose them because they are interested and sometimes it's because they have friends in that elective. In the grand scheme of things who cares they're the ones who have to go to that class everyday not you.
Anonymous wrote:I'll side with your husband here. As a pp said, these choices and matter for high school pathways and most middle schoolers aren't thinking along those lines. If this is mcps, middle school foreign language classes go on your high school transcript. From the perspective of future college applications, I'm not sure it is the best path to switch languages after only one year - colleges want to see students stick with a language and master it at a high level, not switch year to year. If your school system doesn't have the same policy of counting middle school language classes toward high school (which is a ridiculous policy in my opinion), then I would be much less concerned about my child switching language choice but still would want to talk to her to make sure the choice was fully thought through. Also there are engineering/tech type electives one can take in my kids' mcps middle school that put you onto a certain pathway for classes in high school. So again, I just think that a child's middle school and even high school schedules need parent input and approval.