Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the push for high school classes in 7th grade? Do you have an end goal in mind?
People move to Virginia for UVA. The price + prestige combination seems unbeatable to them. Then they discover that getting into UVA from FCPS is a developmentally-inappropriate arms race which at this point requires students to run a six-year marathon in a pressure cooker. Faced with the choice of their child attending a lower-ranked Virginia state school, or paying for a similarly-ranked private or OOS school, parents instead decide to put more and more pressure on their kids. The end goal is UVA, but it’s also about justifying the parents’ choices about where and how to invest in real estate and raise their children.
Anonymous wrote:Please don’t put additional stress on your child.
Please let her find enjoyment in the journey. Always focusing on the future will make you miss out on the present.
Anonymous wrote:Its not that hard, honestly. You point out the team of workmen digging up the street and holding the "stop" sign and you say these guys didn't generally do well in school and likely didn't go to college
And the people at the grocery store working the check out.
And then you talk about the doctor you visit or the dentist and how they needed very advanced degrees to do what they do.
And then you talk about money and what you can afford and cannot afford depending on your career.
I told my son this when he was EIGHT and he 100% took it on board.
Anonymous wrote:You tell yourself that there will be a college that's right for whoever your kid turns out to be, not that your kid needs to make herself fit a preselected group of colleges. Then you relax.
Anonymous wrote:Its not that hard, honestly. You point out the team of workmen digging up the street and holding the "stop" sign and you say these guys didn't generally do well in school and likely didn't go to college
And the people at the grocery store working the check out.
And then you talk about the doctor you visit or the dentist and how they needed very advanced degrees to do what they do.
And then you talk about money and what you can afford and cannot afford depending on your career.
I told my son this when he was EIGHT and he 100% took it on board.
Anonymous wrote:DD is in FCPS and in her second year of some high school credit classes (language/math). It is obvious from conversations that she doesn’t understand the impact of her grades on her high school GPA and ultimately college opportunities.
She is a mostly A student, but ended 7th grade Algebra with a B+ . On the one hand she is highly self motivated, an avid reader and excellent writer. On the other hand she puts a lot of stress on herself and doesn’t understand time management or that the high school courses require the most focus as they “count.”
Parents: Graduated College in 2002/2003 from HYP and a SLAC having grown up in a high pressure cooker environment where everyone we knew was college bound. We both have graduate degrees and doing well, but have tried to de-emphasize the over pressure of our youth for our own kids.
Yet, so much of our education was funneling us, we understood young that we needed to be “well rounded, high achieving and in solid stand out ECs.”
Is there a class for younger kids? Should we casually be visiting college campuses? I just feel like it is both way more competitive now, and some how my child is clueless. (So maybe we the parents are too about how to prepare her.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let your kid be a kid. Please stop. You’re on track for the kid to hate you and or have a mental health crisis.
Unfortunately, That one B+ in 7th grade could already ruin her chances at top schools.