BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You lost me at have confidence in your plans and training....another gaming parent.
Anonymous wrote:
You lost me at have confidence in your plans and training....another gaming parent.
This is not a gaming parent but one who knows the meaning of parenting the young. Not all parents are confident, have plans, or no how to parent. This is not a surprise.
What is the role of a parent?
To teach, mentor, train, guide, nurture and nourish their young.
Only fools and idiots think otherwise.
This is no game or boating accident.
You lost me at have confidence in your plans and training....another gaming parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear heart, my AAP 7th grader is taking Algebra. And he was not at the forefront of his cohort as several of his friends already took Algebra last year (in 6th grade). Thanks for your concern.
The point of my post is that parents will be pushing for Algebra even earlier -- as in 5th grade.
My child and another took Algebra in 5th. Both made AMC AIME in 6th grade. But so what? Don't worry about other kids or my kid, worry about your kid and have confidence in your plans and training. It's very simple. A few kids are ready for Algebra in 5th grade.
You lost me at have confidence in your plans and training....another gaming parent.
Anonymous wrote:Dear heart, my AAP 7th grader is taking Algebra. And he was not at the forefront of his cohort as several of his friends already took Algebra last year (in 6th grade). Thanks for your concern.
The point of my post is that parents will be pushing for Algebra even earlier -- as in 5th grade.
My child and another took Algebra in 5th. Both made AMC AIME in 6th grade. But so what? Don't worry about other kids or my kid, worry about your kid and have confidence in your plans and training. It's very simple. A few kids are ready for Algebra in 5th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP you joke but my 8th graders peers have already designed things,built computers, built higher processing chips, started businesses online,patented things. It's not all the kids at TJ but the top 10-20 percent are BRILLIANT. Beyond normal comprehension.
I've no doubt a miniscule cohort of kids have done these things. The problem around here won't be the kids, but the NOVA parents who will all be convinced that their kids could be in this tiny group if they just push them a little. Let the gaming begin!
Also, many times kids who have achieved "extraordinary" things at early ages have parents or family friends who are in the particular business or profession in which the accomplishments lie. Other kids may be equally intelligent but lack the right connections to make certain kinds of accomplishments possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP you joke but my 8th graders peers have already designed things,built computers, built higher processing chips, started businesses online,patented things. It's not all the kids at TJ but the top 10-20 percent are BRILLIANT. Beyond normal comprehension.
I've no doubt a miniscule cohort of kids have done these things. The problem around here won't be the kids, but the NOVA parents who will all be convinced that their kids could be in this tiny group if they just push them a little. Let the gaming begin!
Dear heart, my AAP 7th grader is taking Algebra. And he was not at the forefront of his cohort as several of his friends already took Algebra last year (in 6th grade). Thanks for your concern.
The point of my post is that parents will be pushing for Algebra even earlier -- as in 5th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Yep but guess what - best TJ candidates have both skills. And many others. True intelligence isn't 1D.
Anonymous wrote:Um, you really aren't educated about FFX AAP are you? Many kids do take Algebra and Geometry in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP you joke but my 8th graders peers have already designed things,built computers, built higher processing chips, started businesses online,patented things. It's not all the kids at TJ but the top 10-20 percent are BRILLIANT. Beyond normal comprehension.
I've no doubt a miniscule cohort of kids have done these things. The problem around here won't be the kids, but the NOVA parents who will all be convinced that their kids could be in this tiny group if they just push them a little. Let the gaming begin!