Anonymous wrote:What’s your goal for grade skipping? It might not seem a big deal now, but fast forward to high school being a 14 yo when all of your friends are learning to drive, or other similar situations that will put them out of place with their peers.
Find opportunities for kid to stretch such as a tutor or extracurricular activities but think more holistically about what a grade level actually represents, which is also a developmentally appropriate peer group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't you tell it's a troll post? In first post, OP says child is 2 grades ahead. In subsequent post, says child is doing algebra.
Either child is doing baskc algebra, which most 2nd graders can do, or OP is exaggerating. Real algebra is taught at 7th in most privates -- for the accelerated kids.
oP here. Why it’s a troll. My DC does 4th grade BA math at home. 4th grade BA math introduces algebra.
Yes, very basic algebra, which many non-gifted 2nd graders can do.
You have an inflated sense of your child’s giftedness. Sorry, two grades above suggests bright, not gifted.
No good private would allow a child to skip grades. Some of the more desperate ones might.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't you tell it's a troll post? In first post, OP says child is 2 grades ahead. In subsequent post, says child is doing algebra.
Either child is doing baskc algebra, which most 2nd graders can do, or OP is exaggerating. Real algebra is taught at 7th in most privates -- for the accelerated kids.
oP here. Why it’s a troll. My DC does 4th grade BA math at home. 4th grade BA math introduces algebra.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Sorry I didn’t mean to have a discussion on the definition of gifted or profoundly gifted. Just want to see if it’s normal to skip grades in private school for a bored learner. Please kindly provide me with any experience or advice.
And I hear you, the advance in math might eventually fade out. But I just want to keep my DC engaged in school. Any idea?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you had the child formally tested? Two grades above in math and reading does not necessarily meet the official standard of “profoundly gifted.”
I was thinking the same thing. My DCs were reading at least at around middle school level by 2nd grade (according to the school's reading specialist) and both probably could have handle grade or two above in math, but they were then (and still are) no where near profoundly gifted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't you tell it's a troll post? In first post, OP says child is 2 grades ahead. In subsequent post, says child is doing algebra.
Either child is doing baskc algebra, which most 2nd graders can do, or OP is exaggerating. Real algebra is taught at 7th in most privates -- for the accelerated kids.
oP here. Why it’s a troll. My DC does 4th grade BA math at home. 4th grade BA math introduces algebra.