Anonymous wrote:DC2
Violin & piano 1x/week
Swim team 1x/week
Fencing 2-3x/week (go less if want to rest)
Chess 1x/week
DC1:
Violin & piano 1x/week
Swim team 1x/week
Equestrian 2x/month
Scout 1x/month
Winter sports 1x/week for 2 months
DCs enjoy all activities and don’t want to quit any of them.
Anonymous wrote:Tiger for sure
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4th grader:
piano 1x a week
math comp class 1x a week
heritage language school - 6hrs on sat but includes chess + lego robotics + add. language
Very tiger
Learning your heritage language while doing fun activities isn’t tiger parenting, it is helping to maintain family heritage.
For 6 hrs every Saturday? Please. Parents can teach heritage through their every day lives at home.
We have never participated in language school but the people I know who do appreciate the time spent with people from their country, the use of language, and the social interaction. That is not being a tiger parent, that is prioritizing understanding your heritage and language. Heritage is more than just speaking the language. Some of us live in communities like us and can learn those traditions and history easily enough, not everyone has that benefit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4th grader:
piano 1x a week
math comp class 1x a week
heritage language school - 6hrs on sat but includes chess + lego robotics + add. language
Very tiger
Learning your heritage language while doing fun activities isn’t tiger parenting, it is helping to maintain family heritage.
For 6 hrs every Saturday? Please. Parents can teach heritage through their every day lives at home.
We have never participated in language school but the people I know who do appreciate the time spent with people from their country, the use of language, and the social interaction. That is not being a tiger parent, that is prioritizing understanding your heritage and language. Heritage is more than just speaking the language. Some of us live in communities like us and can learn those traditions and history easily enough, not everyone has that benefit.
Disagree. It’s tiger parenting. Most of the kids hate it. We know a lot of them.
Anonymous wrote:For all those who do swim lessons - do you make your kids go or do they actually like it? We let our (3) kids stop once they were safe in the water but only one ever learned strokes beyond front crawl. It was always such a chore getting everyone to lessons but I’m sure they all could benefit from further instruction
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4th grader:
piano 1x a week
math comp class 1x a week
heritage language school - 6hrs on sat but includes chess + lego robotics + add. language
Very tiger
Learning your heritage language while doing fun activities isn’t tiger parenting, it is helping to maintain family heritage.
For 6 hrs every Saturday? Please. Parents can teach heritage through their every day lives at home.
We have never participated in language school but the people I know who do appreciate the time spent with people from their country, the use of language, and the social interaction. That is not being a tiger parent, that is prioritizing understanding your heritage and language. Heritage is more than just speaking the language. Some of us live in communities like us and can learn those traditions and history easily enough, not everyone has that benefit.
Anonymous wrote:For all those who do swim lessons - do you make your kids go or do they actually like it? We let our (3) kids stop once they were safe in the water but only one ever learned strokes beyond front crawl. It was always such a chore getting everyone to lessons but I’m sure they all could benefit from further instruction
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4th grader:
piano 1x a week
math comp class 1x a week
heritage language school - 6hrs on sat but includes chess + lego robotics + add. language
Very tiger
Learning your heritage language while doing fun activities isn’t tiger parenting, it is helping to maintain family heritage.
For 6 hrs every Saturday? Please. Parents can teach heritage through their every day lives at home.