Anonymous wrote:" Is your child in public or private school? Is the school full of high achieving students? It is now hard to get C's in some public high schools because of grade inflation."
This is also NOT true in mid-level MCPS schools. Our DC signs up for the honors version of classes and seems to end up with a 79% grade and the highest C in the class all the time.
Back to the OP's thread. My guess is that OP's DC is not actually trying but rather is putting in more time doing things that don't work for longer and longer periods of time.
This shows they care and want to do better but that they need HELP. OP, during the fourth quarter you need to encourage DC to go see their teachers and ask questions.
They need to spend some of their time not just doing their HW but thinking about the material enough so that they can make sense of the material and formulate questions they can ask.
OP, you need to look around the web for blogs or articles that talk about methods and better ways to study. You might want to find a class this summer that teaches studying skills.
There is no magic way to study but lots of people get stuck on the idea that if they pay attention in class, do all their homework and go over everything the night before the test that there is nothing else.
This method only allows a student to see any part of the material 3 times. Very few people can learn, say foreign language vocab or Calculus procedures only seeing them 3 times.
One possible way to increase the number of times DC sees the material is to spend 2 hours over every weekend, say 30 minutes for each of DC's 4 hardest classes building review sheets (and formulating questions for the teacher) for all the material they learned in the 4 classes since the last test. When the test comes around, not only will they have a solid review sheet and answers to questions they had as they learned the material, but they will have spent reasonably spaced out time learning the material in small chunks that are more reasonable to learn than a whole tests worth of cramming.
OP, please get on this. As others have said, your DC really is NOT really having problems in HS but they show signs of being on a track where they will have problems if they aim for a major that is harder than average in college.
Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Does she know how to study? I never did. Help her learn to take good notes and how to use outlines and notecards to study.
Anonymous wrote:The classes are too hard. Scale back significantly.
Even if, perhaps, each individual class is an appropriate level, their schedule in it's entirety is too difficult for them to manage successfully.
Anonymous wrote:Same here. DC is sophomore with a weighted 3.3. He has rallied recently and should have 3.6w this quarter and I hope he can end year with a 3.4w.
He studies, but I'm sure he could do better. Really bad with tests and ends up retaking at least half of them. Tutors have been helpful at times, depends on the subject.
Only one EC (band) which doesn't take up too much time, except during marching band season.
He takes some honors and IB courses (he's in an IB school in FCPS). Right now, we're hoping for a mid-level in-state school, but we'll see.
Anonymous wrote:This is your definition of “doing horribly?” Wow.
Anonymous wrote:If your child's grades continue to go downhill, as the material gets harder...I agree with the recommendation to get neuropsych testing. This happened to my child, who was working as hard as he possibly could. We eventually found out that he has several mild learning disabilities which really interfere with his ability to "decode" higher level material. I so wish we had known this before starting our college search, taking the SAT, etc.
Mild disabilities show up late, because children can compensate for them at lower grades. Just make sure this is on your radar screen as a possibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is your child in public or private school? Is the school full of high achieving students? It is now hard to get C's in some public high schools because of grade inflation.
This is a lie private school families tell themselves (and I guess others) to justify the ridiculous amount they spend on tuition.
+100. I think it’s hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is your child in public or private school? Is the school full of high achieving students? It is now hard to get C's in some public high schools because of grade inflation.
This is a lie private school families tell themselves (and I guess others) to justify the ridiculous amount they spend on tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Is your child in public or private school? Is the school full of high achieving students? It is now hard to get C's in some public high schools because of grade inflation.
Anonymous wrote:Have you had your kid evaluated? We kept being surprised by our ds' getting straight As on homework and getting Bs and Cs on tests. It turns out there is a significant disparity between his ability and his processing speed. As the psychologist explained it, a slow computer and a fast computer will get to the same answer, but the slow computer needs a lot more time.
He has a 504 now and is entitled to take extra time on tests. We have gone through executive functioning/study skills tutoring with him at various points, and we have talked to his counselor about what an appropriate courseload is.
I wouldn't worry about college for right now -- I'd work on getting your dc help via testing, tutors, discussions with the counselor, whatever it takes to help your dc live up to his/her abilities. What you don't want is a cycle of discouragement to set in where perceived failure leads to actual failure.
Schools really don't teach study skills, or note-taking skills, at all. It's really sink or swim for a lot of kids.