Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help. My 9th grader is brillant, but refuses to do homework. I think he has a 2.0. To be fair, his school grades as follows: 100 - 95% A, 94 -90% B, 89 - 85% C, 84 - 80% D. Please don't ask why we signed up for this! It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Anyway, did you experience this with your son and did he eventually get it together and go to a good college? How was the college process?
Thanks in advance for your advice.
I will give you some honest advice, if your dream is for him to attend an Ivy or similarly good top-25 school, then it will be difficult with those 9th grade grades on his transcript. UNLESS, he can turn it around and get nothing but As/B+s for the next three years, AND earn excellent scores on the SAT/ACT, the AP exams, and the SAT Subject Tests; OR he can demonstrate an incredible talent or ability in some other area (is he a talented artist, a very accomplished musician, a recruited athlete).
If he is currently in a private school, I would pull him out for 10th grade and go public.
Anonymous wrote:PP, because grade matter in high school. Having your child in a school where they have a C average is tough. I also would recommend considering a different high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help. My 9th grader is brillant, but refuses to do homework. I think he has a 2.0. To be fair, his school grades as follows: 100 - 95% A, 94 -90% B, 89 - 85% C, 84 - 80% D. Please don't ask why we signed up for this! It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Anyway, did you experience this with your son and did he eventually get it together and go to a good college? How was the college process?
Thanks in advance for your advice.
I will give you some honest advice, if your dream is for him to attend an Ivy or similarly good top-25 school, then it will be difficult with those 9th grade grades on his transcript. UNLESS, he can turn it around and get nothing but As/B+s for the next three years, AND earn excellent scores on the SAT/ACT, the AP exams, and the SAT Subject Tests; OR he can demonstrate an incredible talent or ability in some other area (is he a talented artist, a very accomplished musician, a recruited athlete).
If he is currently in a private school, I would pull him out for 10th grade and go public.
Anonymous wrote:Help. My 9th grader is brillant, but refuses to do homework. I think he has a 2.0. To be fair, his school grades as follows: 100 - 95% A, 94 -90% B, 89 - 85% C, 84 - 80% D. Please don't ask why we signed up for this! It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Anyway, did you experience this with your son and did he eventually get it together and go to a good college? How was the college process?
Thanks in advance for your advice.