Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest used a binder and loose leaf in HS. Freshman year, she had a course that required a separate binder with dividers. So that year, she had two.
My rising 11 girl has used folders and one 5 subject notebook. Nearly every handout has been digital.
My rising 11 boy has used folders and loose leaf. He’s gotten more hard copies.
Teachers usually provide hard copy handouts pre-hole punched so the binder hole punch was a waste of money for my oldest.
There is no additional cost to hole punching handouts on the copiers...
Yes, that’s why teachers pre-punch them and your kid probably won’t ever use the kind that are carried in a binder.
Not all teachers pre-punch.
Punching holes (and stapling pages) will often make the photocopiers break down.
So will copying double-sided, and yet most of us still do these things because it is best for the students.
+1. Yes, the paper is used at different rates by different subjects. These notebooks are not helpful.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of 3 here. Oldest 2 kids used a spiral and folder for each class. It worked great for both of them. It’s just much less cumbersome. Youngest is a rising freshman and insisting he wants a binder. He has never used a binder properly so I’m hoping he will embrace the folders/spirals but I’m letting him decide.
Meaning an individual spiral notebook for each class? That is what older students recommended at the orientation, but I wonder if a 5-subject would be easier than 5 separate notebooks!
As a girl who used the prior PP's system throughout high school and college (individual spiral and folder for each class), I never could get behind tbe 5-subject notebook. The rate at which the paper would get used in each class was different, and then what do you do when you reach the end of the section for one class but no where near for another class??!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait until she goes to each class to see what the teachers want. My son's school requires a thin binder for each class set up a certain way. Maybe that's a private school thing but I'd wait. Just bring a folder, paper and pens, etc during the first week until the teachers give out the syllabus and go over it.
And, since this is MCPS, not private as you like to point out, how about telling us what happens in MCPS which is more relevant.
Sorry. I can't resist the urge to drop that my kid goes to private. It's one of my many compulsions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait until she goes to each class to see what the teachers want. My son's school requires a thin binder for each class set up a certain way. Maybe that's a private school thing but I'd wait. Just bring a folder, paper and pens, etc during the first week until the teachers give out the syllabus and go over it.
And, since this is MCPS, not private as you like to point out, how about telling us what happens in MCPS which is more relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest used a binder and loose leaf in HS. Freshman year, she had a course that required a separate binder with dividers. So that year, she had two.
My rising 11 girl has used folders and one 5 subject notebook. Nearly every handout has been digital.
My rising 11 boy has used folders and loose leaf. He’s gotten more hard copies.
Teachers usually provide hard copy handouts pre-hole punched so the binder hole punch was a waste of money for my oldest.
There is no additional cost to hole punching handouts on the copiers...
Yes, that’s why teachers pre-punch them and your kid probably won’t ever use the kind that are carried in a binder.
Not all teachers pre-punch.
Punching holes (and stapling pages) will often make the photocopiers break down.
Anonymous wrote:Kid starting high school in the fall.
One friend recommended 5 separate notebooks with folders for each subject. Another friend recommended a 5-subject notebook. School hasn't said anything.
How does your high schooler organize his/her stuff?