Anonymous wrote:Strongest students I know, seemingly least stressed, are kids with significant sports time commitments. They seem to prioritize their time to get it all done and still get enough sleep. I think lack of sleep is a huge part of the stress kids are experiencing.
Anonymous wrote:When talking to my kids, it seems, as someone above already noted, that intense kids will continue to be intense. 2 of my kids went to Stone Ridge, which some describe here as a grind/pressure cooker. Not the experience for my kids at all, with stellar college matriculations. Kids are wired the way they are wired.
Anonymous wrote:Such a weird flex for parents to brag that their kids aren't stressed because they do all the things.
8/10 of these kids are living to please adults and will resent it down the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Strongest students I know, seemingly least stressed, are kids with significant sports time commitments. They seem to prioritize their time to get it all done and still get enough sleep. I think lack of sleep is a huge part of the stress kids are experiencing.
No the kid with a sport get less sleep and no free time for anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The pressure comes from parents. There are healthy and unhealthy pathways for kids to choose through all of these schools. It depends on the values and pressure they get from home.( I am a longtime Independent school teacher, administrator and parent. )
No it’s both the school and parents. The school tells you the homework load is 3-4 hours a night, plus weekend and over school breaks. This is what some parents call “rigor”. Just doing more work is not rigor. This is high school not college.
You can prepare the student for college without 3-4 hours of homework on top of an 8-9 hour day. Remember the workload increases at the end of a semester with papers, projects and exams overlapping = little sleep, high stress and not the kids best work. Colleges do it better.
“Colleges do it better” partly because kids in college aren’t spending a ridiculous amount of time on sports ( unless they are athletes) after school for 2 hours, travel soccer, etc. High school kids are over scheduled beyond their academic work.
Anonymous wrote:Strongest students I know, seemingly least stressed, are kids with significant sports time commitments. They seem to prioritize their time to get it all done and still get enough sleep. I think lack of sleep is a huge part of the stress kids are experiencing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The pressure comes from parents. There are healthy and unhealthy pathways for kids to choose through all of these schools. It depends on the values and pressure they get from home.( I am a longtime Independent school teacher, administrator and parent. )
No it’s both the school and parents. The school tells you the homework load is 3-4 hours a night, plus weekend and over school breaks. This is what some parents call “rigor”. Just doing more work is not rigor. This is high school not college.
You can prepare the student for college without 3-4 hours of homework on top of an 8-9 hour day. Remember the workload increases at the end of a semester with papers, projects and exams overlapping = little sleep, high stress and not the kids best work. Colleges do it better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The pressure comes from parents. There are healthy and unhealthy pathways for kids to choose through all of these schools. It depends on the values and pressure they get from home.( I am a longtime Independent school teacher, administrator and parent. )
Ok, but I am a much more anxious parent when I'm around other anxious/high strung parents. And my kid is that way too. Any human with the social skills is going to be affected by the other people around them.
By targeting a school with a range of learners that focuses on balance, you find school communities who are attracted to that balance. By targeting schools that focus on rigor or prestige, you find school communities who are attracted to that rigor and prestige.