Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Flipped classroom? What are they using for the home teaching pieces?
OP, for what it is worth, my DD is the same age as yours and also TAG identified. She shadowed at SR last year and really liked the girls and the teachers but she said the academics in the lower school seemed no different than what she was working on in her previous school where she was pretty bored and coasting. That's one day though, but since no one seems to be giving you much else I thought I'd offer it.
I'm the poster that said it's "eh". My DD comes home with hw to do however the lesson has not been taught in class. So, she takes the notes on logarithms in her notebook from the book, and then does the assigned hw. This is okay to an extent. But in class the teacher only goes over homework, and does not necessarily "explain" and teach. I have met with the math teacher and she really only sits at her desk during class. My DD was angry earlier in the year but now she uses Khan Academy and other Youtube videos to teach her the material for math. It is this way in her Spanish, and History classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Flipped classroom? What are they using for the home teaching pieces?
OP, for what it is worth, my DD is the same age as yours and also TAG identified. She shadowed at SR last year and really liked the girls and the teachers but she said the academics in the lower school seemed no different than what she was working on in her previous school where she was pretty bored and coasting. That's one day though, but since no one seems to be giving you much else I thought I'd offer it.
I'm the poster that said it's "eh". My DD comes home with hw to do however the lesson has not been taught in class. So, she takes the notes on logarithms in her notebook from the book, and then does the assigned hw. This is okay to an extent. But in class the teacher only goes over homework, and does not necessarily "explain" and teach. I have met with the math teacher and she really only sits at her desk during class. My DD was angry earlier in the year but now she uses Khan Academy and other Youtube videos to teach her the material for math. It is this way in her Spanish, and History classes.
So why are you paying all that money for DD to teach herself? Homeschooling is much cheaper.
This was my first thought too. I was home schooled. Good experience. But I sure wouldn't pay a school $27,000 to send me off to do something I can for myself, unsupervised, in a public library or on my couch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Flipped classroom? What are they using for the home teaching pieces?
OP, for what it is worth, my DD is the same age as yours and also TAG identified. She shadowed at SR last year and really liked the girls and the teachers but she said the academics in the lower school seemed no different than what she was working on in her previous school where she was pretty bored and coasting. That's one day though, but since no one seems to be giving you much else I thought I'd offer it.
I'm the poster that said it's "eh". My DD comes home with hw to do however the lesson has not been taught in class. So, she takes the notes on logarithms in her notebook from the book, and then does the assigned hw. This is okay to an extent. But in class the teacher only goes over homework, and does not necessarily "explain" and teach. I have met with the math teacher and she really only sits at her desk during class. My DD was angry earlier in the year but now she uses Khan Academy and other Youtube videos to teach her the material for math. It is this way in her Spanish, and History classes.
So why are you paying all that money for DD to teach herself? Homeschooling is much cheaper.