Anonymous wrote:Our kid tested and ended up repeating Algenra I, despite an A in the course in 8th, and will not be on track for calc at all. We are stuck (so yes fight it OP!) and worry we need to leave the school in favor of a place that will allow for more advancement. Anyone else find their child in this spot and how did they fare with college admissions etc?
Anonymous wrote:The problem is most parents in this area have no math background and so just blindly trust the schools. Sometimes their placement is on the money but many, many times it is not. This is one of the big downsides of the private schools. They think they know more than they do.
Anonymous wrote:Many, many times?
Anonymous wrote:Our kid tested and ended up repeating Algenra I, despite an A in the course in 8th, and will not be on track for calc at all. We are stuck (so yes fight it OP!) and worry we need to leave the school in favor of a place that will allow for more advancement. Anyone else find their child in this spot and how did they fare with college admissions etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dissent from all of the advice. Get your child placed in the class you want or leave. The schools are terrible at placement and you will regret it later down the road in college admissions
Only if you’re hung up on top 50 schools.
Anonymous wrote:How are the schools terrible at placement? The student did not answer enough questions correctly to prove content understanding. Seems pretty objective. Disagree about college admissions- now through 3 of 4 kids. If you have a kid that is going into STEM, you want them to understand the foundations well, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our child was placed one level below his current level in math placement for 9th grade. We are not happy about it. What can we do to address this with the school? Will they reconsider their decision? They are offering a retake of the test in June which may be too late. What if he still gets placed below level?
Are we on the hook to pay the entire year tuition if we remove him from the school at this early stage? We haven't paid all the fees, just the contract fees which but the way is also a nice chunk.
It sounds like the only way he stays in the lower level math is if he doesn't do well on the retake. Am I wrong?
If he does poorly on the placement test twice, then you should listen to the school.
Anonymous wrote:I dissent from all of the advice. Get your child placed in the class you want or leave. The schools are terrible at placement and you will regret it later down the road in college admissions