Anonymous wrote:The specific area of concern is test prepping. Where kids essentially learn how to take the single test. For example, give a kid the same test three times, and a smart kid will do better the third time.
For example, are you suggesting that kids only take the admission entrance SAT once when they apply to College? How many times do you recommend? Will you ban 6th, 7th, and 8th graders around the country that take the ACT and SAT exams for CTY, NUMATS and DUKE TIP talent search and then again in 11th and 12th gerades when they apply to college? Some of these kids have taken the exam between 3 and 6 times before it counts for the IVY college sweepstakes. What's you view on this. Ban talent searches? Police the number of times a child takes the SAT or ACT between 4th and 12th grades?
The specific area of concern is test prepping. Where kids essentially learn how to take the single test. For example, give a kid the same test three times, and a smart kid will do better the third time.
The specific area of concern is test prepping. Where kids essentially learn how to take the single test. For example, give a kid the same test three times, and a smart kid will do better the third time.
Anonymous wrote:what if your DC became bored or worst disruptive in class due to all the prepping? are you going to blame the teacher or yourself?
My child reads one or two novels a week for the last 3 years. Yes, traditional classrooms are boring since he is obviously performing (reading, writing and arithmatic) at a much higher level than his 10-yr-old age group peers.
Why on earth would any sane parent blame themselves or teacher for this fortuitous state of affairs? And if the classroom and teacher can't keep up with the child it sounds like you need to get togather with his teacher and the principal to solve the issue.
Longstanding voluminous reading will PREP a child bigtime for all the rigors of your AAP but I would never tell my child to slow down in order to allow his teacher to catch up and keep up with him or her!
I would keep on prepping my child.
what if your DC became bored or worst disruptive in class due to all the prepping? are you going to blame the teacher or yourself?
Anonymous wrote:I agree. Children should not be allowed to DCUM surf. It's not a healthy pasttime.
Anonymous wrote:Hey, how about a limit on how much TV watching, video game playing, and face booking? Oops, these must be the fun activities? Perhaps, these crazies can lobby the College Board, AP exam authorities, ACT, ERB and State examining boards to overall their exams to include TV watching, video games and elements of social media then our kids can claim a superb education with bigtime prep and prepping. This would solve the problem for these parents' masquerade of their abject inadequacies.
Anonymous wrote:Why can't you people be happy and proud of the children you have??? This makes me sad and drives me nuts.
Let your kids live full and enriching lives and get to fully experience and enjoy their youth!
Remember, colleges want well-ROUNDED kids... not eggheads with numbers spewing forth.
Even Steve Jobs had a lowly job picking apples -- basically goofing around in his youth -- which let his mind mature. And later he came into his own, and thus attributing his success to those glory days of youth -- naming his company Apple...
We need to grow the next generation of LEADERS, not ROBOTS. Be a parent, not a sheep.
Anonymous wrote:There are some around "these parts" who seem to imply that prepping kids for tests is unethical.
Additionally, it seems that there are some who believe that having kids "work" is somehow mentally/emotionally damaging and that Tiger parents are somehow abusing their children.
Not sure why they get all up in arms about what other families are doing. I suppose maybe they think that these families are stealing their AAP spots???