Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a surprisingly quick path to Bs and Cs at Deal, especially with the current grading system. I know people like to post on here how "easy" it is, and everyone gets As, but frankly a LOT of very bright kids, particularly boys, struggle to follow the academic routine in middle school. It is normal. Even kids who find the substance of a class easy, wind up with Bs. Even kids who got into top private high schools and Ivy League colleges, didn't get straight As at Deal. True.
Go back and read OPs post. Her kid has bad grades because he is missing assignments - that is the issue that needs to get fixed.
Anonymous wrote:It is a surprisingly quick path to Bs and Cs at Deal, especially with the current grading system. I know people like to post on here how "easy" it is, and everyone gets As, but frankly a LOT of very bright kids, particularly boys, struggle to follow the academic routine in middle school. It is normal. Even kids who find the substance of a class easy, wind up with Bs. Even kids who got into top private high schools and Ivy League colleges, didn't get straight As at Deal. True.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be very worried..sounds like needs assistance with executive functioning. No way 10-20 minutes a night is sufficient for homework. Drill him every night about his assignments and what he has on the horizon. That will enforce the importance and help him start to manage his time. Not working hard is a non starter and that tone needs to be set now before high school.
I totally disagree. My son’s grades are all high 90% and he usually finishes homework on the bus or in the morning before school starts. Deal’s homework isn’t time consuming.
Anonymous wrote:Not turning in homework on another missing assignment can really impact their grades even when they do really well on the tests because a zero really brings down the average.
Just my two cents, but if his grades are down because of missing assignments and/or not making up tests he missed you should give him consequences he cares about. Learning to turn their homework in and following up when an assignment goes missing (which happens A LOT with some teachers) are important skills.
Anonymous wrote:My boy, 12 yo and in seventh grade, got Bs and Cs on his first advisory. It does not seem good at all, but I’m trying to understand the extent of the problem relative to other students. He’s smart, has a lot of common sense, is happy, and a good group of friends. But he doesn’t particularly work hard and is quiet, which surely doesn’t help. He’s in eighth grade math, so there’s that, fwiw. He maybe spends 10-20 minutes a night on homework, and often misses assignments. I have the feeling that his grades will more or less stay the same without drastic intervention. I’ll find out more when I attend the parent-teacher conferences but am wondering what folks think of this performance. Something to worry about? If so, what to do? Do parents work with their kids nightly?
Anonymous wrote:I also find our 7th grade team less responsive than our 6th grade team to emails.
Anonymous wrote:It is a surprisingly quick path to Bs and Cs at Deal, especially with the current grading system. I know people like to post on here how "easy" it is, and everyone gets As, but frankly a LOT of very bright kids, particularly boys, struggle to follow the academic routine in middle school. It is normal. Even kids who find the substance of a class easy, wind up with Bs. Even kids who got into top private high schools and Ivy League colleges, didn't get straight As at Deal. True.
Anonymous wrote:average kids who are average students at average schools get average grades. Don't be daft and try to inject some narrative that makes it more complicated than it needs to be. Get him involved with electronic maintenance/military things. If he is advanced at math electronic theory might come easy to him and if you can fix electronics then education isn't always necessary for a good job.