Anonymous wrote:Have your kid say "Oh yeah, well you're gonna work for me one day."
Anonymous wrote:K teacher asked the kids to vote: math test or party. My DD voted for the math test. Only one. Never knew it was strange to answer that way. But Op, I don't really buy-into your question. I don't think it's a problem. Don't look for problems that aren't there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:was he picked up for "acting white"?
He is white. (Most of his classmates are not). He hasn't been picked on yet. Socially he does very well. So far. I can only assume that all the posters stating that this does not happen or that smart kids are a dime a dozen go to different types of schools. My child definitely stands out (a lot - he's several grade levels ahead e.g. about two in math and three-four in reading) and the other kids definitely notice.
How do you know the kids definitely notice?
Because I've heard them comment on it, and other parents have also commented on it too (that their kids are aware, not that they are).
I've experienced this too. Several of my DC's ES classmates have approached me to say "DC is the smartest kid in our class!" and sometimes their parents would repeat "My DC always says how smart your DC is!" This has happened a number of times, and is very sweet. Nobody is mean about it. I don't know that DC is "cool," but DC is calm, friendly, and comfortable in her own skin, which I'm sure goes a long way. This is ES though, could be a different ballgame in MS and HS. But at that point, there are so many kids, it seems very doable to find a peer group based on common interests. At least that's what we're hoping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one got picked on for being smart at my public school (one DCUM would turn up their noses at for sure). The smart, socially awkward kids got picked on; the smart, socially savvy kids were popular. Getting bad grades or being in remedial classes was very uncool.
Exactly. Picked on for being smart? No. Picked on for being smart and "not cool?"[u] Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one got picked on for being smart at my public school (one DCUM would turn up their noses at for sure). The smart, socially awkward kids got picked on; the smart, socially savvy kids were popular. Getting bad grades or being in remedial classes was very uncool.
Exactly. Picked on for being smart? No. Picked on for being smart and "not cool?" Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:was he picked up for "acting white"?
He is white. (Most of his classmates are not). He hasn't been picked on yet. Socially he does very well. So far. I can only assume that all the posters stating that this does not happen or that smart kids are a dime a dozen go to different types of schools. My child definitely stands out (a lot - he's several grade levels ahead e.g. about two in math and three-four in reading) and the other kids definitely notice.
Perhaps, but I honestly think you're over thinking this and likely thinking too highly of your own child. My kid with a very, very high IQ fits in just fine...but he's humble and has no idea how bright he is. He acts like a normal kid with other kids but with sprinklings of advanced vocab or questions or humor.
How do you know the kids definitely notice?
Anonymous wrote:My kids' school is jam packed with very smart kids. No one picks on them for that.
Anonymous wrote:No one got picked on for being smart at my public school (one DCUM would turn up their noses at for sure). The smart, socially awkward kids got picked on; the smart, socially savvy kids were popular. Getting bad grades or being in remedial classes was very uncool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:was he picked up for "acting white"?
He is white. (Most of his classmates are not). He hasn't been picked on yet. Socially he does very well. So far. I can only assume that all the posters stating that this does not happen or that smart kids are a dime a dozen go to different types of schools. My child definitely stands out (a lot - he's several grade levels ahead e.g. about two in math and three-four in reading) and the other kids definitely notice.
Perhaps, but I honestly think you're over thinking this and likely thinking too highly of your own child. My kid with a very, very high IQ fits in just fine...but he's humble and has no idea how bright he is. He acts like a normal kid with other kids but with sprinklings of advanced vocab or questions or humor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:was he picked up for "acting white"?
He is white. (Most of his classmates are not). He hasn't been picked on yet. Socially he does very well. So far. I can only assume that all the posters stating that this does not happen or that smart kids are a dime a dozen go to different types of schools. My child definitely stands out (a lot - he's several grade levels ahead e.g. about two in math and three-four in reading) and the other kids definitely notice.
Perhaps, but I honestly think you're over thinking this and likely thinking too highly of your own child. My kid with a very, very high IQ fits in just fine...but he's humble and has no idea how bright he is. He acts like a normal kid with other kids but with sprinklings of advanced vocab or questions or humor.