Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We used kumon for a while. It helps, but it's a pity DD can't bear the heavy work. DD now uses beestar math. It's teacher recommended, full of all real life word problems, challenging stuff to help her thinking. DD loves to compete on it with other kids from a lot of other states.
Lisa
I am confusing to choose between Kumon and Beestar and I want to make it clear between Kumon and Beestar which one would the better one for my kid. My son is grade 4 and he loves to play rather than studying and I have a problem to send him to the physical after school classes that's why I'm chasing the right one for my kid. Your answer would be highly appreciated. Thank you.
Not that person, but I would recommend Beestar or Beast Academy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We used kumon for a while. It helps, but it's a pity DD can't bear the heavy work. DD now uses beestar math. It's teacher recommended, full of all real life word problems, challenging stuff to help her thinking. DD loves to compete on it with other kids from a lot of other states.
Lisa
I am confusing to choose between Kumon and Beestar and I want to make it clear between Kumon and Beestar which one would the better one for my kid. My son is grade 4 and he loves to play rather than studying and I have a problem to send him to the physical after school classes that's why I'm chasing the right one for my kid. Your answer would be highly appreciated. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:We used kumon for a while. It helps, but it's a pity DD can't bear the heavy work. DD now uses beestar math. It's teacher recommended, full of all real life word problems, challenging stuff to help her thinking. DD loves to compete on it with other kids from a lot of other states.
Lisa
Anonymous wrote:My children went to Kumon for 4 years. They hated it! Every Single Day, they had to do repetitive mind numbing calculations. This is 365 days a year adding, substracting, multiplying or dividing. There is nothing creative about it. No one would want to learn is such way. No one ever explained to them how to do these calculation. They just had to do it on their own. This was a torture I will never ever put my children to EVER AGAIN. Kumon may teach your children how to do simple math only, but it also is not meant to inspire anyone about math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kumon isn't tutoring, it is learning how to do math calculations quickly and accurately. They would test her and probably start her on addition facts, then subtraction, then multiplication, long division, fractions, decimals, etc. It would take her a 1 to 2 years to reach the Algebra level of Kumon.
My kids have been doing Kumon for years. I'm more optimistic about Kumon working for the OP's child. I don't think it would take so long to reach the Algebra level. Each level has 200 pages. Even if they started him on level A (addition), he could do 10 pages a day, finish the level in 20 days, repeat the last 100 pages in 10 days, thus completing the level in 30 days. Maybe they wouldn't make him repeat the last 100 pages or maybe they would give him more than 10 pages a day. He could probably finish levels B, C, and D as quickly. He may need to cut down the number of pages per day at level E or F (fractions). Algebra starts at level G, I think.
Why not go for the free evaluation and talk to the Kumon instructor about it? Surely they have worked with 9th graders in this situation before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kumon isn't tutoring, it is learning how to do math calculations quickly and accurately. They would test her and probably start her on addition facts, then subtraction, then multiplication, long division, fractions, decimals, etc. It would take her a 1 to 2 years to reach the Algebra level of Kumon.
My kids have been doing Kumon for years. I'm more optimistic about Kumon working for the OP's child. I don't think it would take so long to reach the Algebra level. Each level has 200 pages. Even if they started him on level A (addition), he could do 10 pages a day, finish the level in 20 days, repeat the last 100 pages in 10 days, thus completing the level in 30 days. Maybe they wouldn't make him repeat the last 100 pages or maybe they would give him more than 10 pages a day. He could probably finish levels B, C, and D as quickly. He may need to cut down the number of pages per day at level E or F (fractions). Algebra starts at level G, I think.
Why not go for the free evaluation and talk to the Kumon instructor about it? Surely they have worked with 9th graders in this situation before.