Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He goes to public school. What do you expect?
Former teacher:
Kids from private schools who came to our public school always had gaps in their knowledge. 100% of the time. My niece was in private and was top of the 8th grade in math. The school said she had no peers at her math level because she was so far ahead but they created enrichment for her for the 10th grade curriculum. 3/4 of the way through 8th grade she had to switch to public school in FCPS. She was so far behind that she needed tutoring 3x a week to be able to understand what was being taught. I’m not dissing privates because there are some benefits to them, but don’t kid yourself that private school education is the utopia.
Must have been a crap private school. They are not all created equal. And one anecdote about "someone I know" is helpful not one bit. Privates consistently produce better students on a whole compared to publics in every study. This does NOT mean every student is better. It means generally the average student is better. Is also does NOT mean every private is better than every public. It means again generally on average.... normally when folks talk about privates on this forum we are talking about the "good" private schools, not the run of the mill religious school in the Midwest that your niece might have gone to...
Anonymous wrote:As for its and it’s, these kids have grown up in a world of autocorrect so I don’t find that as big of a deal.
Maybe this isn’t the most mind numbing but recent for us…
I noticed the bags from vacation are still sitting on the bedroom floor. We have been back over three days. Aside from not putting anything away even though I was assured it was done, I looked and saw none of the toiletries were on the counter in the kids bathroom. Deodorant, toothpaste, toothbrush, etc. I asked, “does this mean you haven’t brushed your teeth in over three days?” Reply “I forgot”
Anonymous wrote:A college-age adult relative told me she thought “barbecue” was just a flavor. She didn’t know it had other meanings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He goes to public school. What do you expect?
Former teacher:
Kids from private schools who came to our public school always had gaps in their knowledge. 100% of the time. My niece was in private and was top of the 8th grade in math. The school said she had no peers at her math level because she was so far ahead but they created enrichment for her for the 10th grade curriculum. 3/4 of the way through 8th grade she had to switch to public school in FCPS. She was so far behind that she needed tutoring 3x a week to be able to understand what was being taught. I’m not dissing privates because there are some benefits to them, but don’t kid yourself that private school education is the utopia.
Anonymous wrote:I know that you’re shocked that your kid lacks basic grammar skills. But your title is really alarmist. Some of us have kids who actually did mind blowingly stupid things like the tic toc tide pod challenge or benedryl challenge. Or they tried asphyxiation games. Seriously if you find bad grammar to be a mind blowing event you should count your lucky stars and you should be more self aware than to post something so stupidly insignificant and call is mind blowingly stupid.
Anonymous wrote:. . . Some of us have kids who actually did mind blowingly stupid things like the tic toc tide pod challenge or benedryl challenge. Or they tried asphyxiation games. Seriously if you find bad grammar to be a mind blowing event you should count your lucky stars and you should be more self aware than to post something so stupidly insignificant and call is mind blowingly stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 22 y.o. son recently needed step by step instructions on how to use the post office. Apparently, so far he's only ever used prepaid labels provided by retailers or EBay.
I work at a university and have lost count of the kids with no idea how to address an envelope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He goes to public school. What do you expect?
Former teacher:
Kids from private schools who came to our public school always had gaps in their knowledge. 100% of the time. My niece was in private and was top of the 8th grade in math. The school said she had no peers at her math level because she was so far ahead but they created enrichment for her for the 10th grade curriculum. 3/4 of the way through 8th grade she had to switch to public school in FCPS. She was so far behind that she needed tutoring 3x a week to be able to understand what was being taught. I’m not dissing privates because there are some benefits to them, but don’t kid yourself that private school education is the utopia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this some kind of humble brag - the most mind-blowingly stupid thing your kid has done is not know the difference between its and it's?
If you're serious and that is actually true, then congratulations your kid is exceptional.
Seeing how OP has used this thread to post about her son's high GPA and AP scores I'm not even sure this is a "humble" brag post.