Anonymous wrote:I just looked into the GED. You have to be 18 or a high school dropout to take it. My kid is neither.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:total troll SAT's in 8th grade ? if not a troll I feel really sorry for your child.
CTY for gifted kids requires it-NP
And they usually take it in 7th. I did that in the early 80s. This is not a new thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:total troll SAT's in 8th grade ? if not a troll I feel really sorry for your child.
CTY for gifted kids requires it-NP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:total troll SAT's in 8th grade ? if not a troll I feel really sorry for your child.
CTY for gifted kids requires it-NP
Anonymous wrote:Rather than focus on her taking college classes spring of her junior year, focus on taking all the classes she needs to graduate early, and then apply to college in spring for fall admittance (during what would’ve been her senior year.) Otherwise, just let her take the core high school credits and let the classes be easy, and supplement with other high interest courses from elsewhere. Don’t just randomly pursue “harder” classes right now. You need a concrete plan for HS graduation and college intention.
Have you discussed it with her HS counselor?
Anonymous wrote:total troll SAT's in 8th grade ? if not a troll I feel really sorry for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Bard has a program for early admission for high school students. I think juniors qualify.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done this? Considering this?
My kid is so bored in high school, and now that most colleges are online, I figure she could go to college for a year online, possibly starting in January (why not?).
My kid is too young to leave home, but her brain is ready for college. She went to CTY summer camp for three summers and was extremely happy taking college level classes there.
She's so miserable with online high school classes, which are mostly busy work, no substance.
She took community college classes this summer when her job was cancelled, but the classes were too easy for her.
Is this a crazy idea? What colleges might we look at? She took her SATs in 8th grade and did well enough to get into a top-tier college.