Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.
I don't get being a hands off parent. Can you help him? If not get a tutor. Pre-cal is far harder than any other math. Our pre-cal teacher is very good and it's a very different teaching style with a textbook and a lot more homework. We are very hands on and a parent helps and reviews it with our child. I would not have him drop down.
Op here. I took precalculus in 11th grade 30 years ago. I cannot help at all with math. Our teacher uses a textbook and gives a lot of homework. I am willing to get him a tutor I was just asking if it makes more sense to just step down to regular precalculus. He is a 9th grader so he is still going to be able to take higher level maths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at Wootton in Honors PreCalc as well. The teacher is very intimidating and explained at BTS night that this will be a hard class. She said real math starts now and everything prior to this did not count. I was scared leaving BTS night. We have a tutor now once a week via Zoom. Not sure if it will help as we just started. NHS and advisory period can be used for help as well. Or before school this particular teacher is there for visits.
Is your child complaining that assessments are very short like 20 minutes for 10 problems? This has been one of my son’s issues. That said I do not want to blame the teacher in any way, although I was scared too leaving BTS night.
I will. This teacher is putting his own ego above the students's learning, compensating for his own insecurity by lording over the students that he is better at math than they are.
My excellent AP teacher said that when he gives a test, he times himself doing it, and then gives the kids triple that time.
You are making stuff up. Why would you jump to that conclusion? Perhaps the students in question are just ill-prepared.
The students in question aren't unprepared at Back to School Night.
There's no "preparation" for gimmicky speed tests. That's plain bad pedagogy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.
While it's great to have a plan, I wouldn't want one of my students to risk being unhappy and stressed in Honors PC on the belief that he wants to be physicist major 4 years from now. It's quite possible that his interests may change. (He hasn't even had high school physics yet.) On the other hand, if hard work and a tutor can help him persevere without ill effect, then Honors PC could work out fine.
I do question a year of AB followed by a year of BC. Except for a few objectives, BC is the same course as AB for 8 units before the 2 units that are exclusive to BC. In other words, he would get the entire AB course all over again while in BC. Not a tragedy, but a better path might be AB or BC, then multivariable, then AP Stat. A good thing to discuss with a counselor.
There is nothing wrong with doing AB followed by BC. It's not uncommon and will build a strong foundation for someone who wants to major in physics.
Anonymous wrote:
There is nothing wrong with doing AB followed by BC. It's not uncommon and will build a strong foundation for someone who wants to major in physics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at Wootton in Honors PreCalc as well. The teacher is very intimidating and explained at BTS night that this will be a hard class. She said real math starts now and everything prior to this did not count. I was scared leaving BTS night. We have a tutor now once a week via Zoom. Not sure if it will help as we just started. NHS and advisory period can be used for help as well. Or before school this particular teacher is there for visits.
Is your child complaining that assessments are very short like 20 minutes for 10 problems? This has been one of my son’s issues. That said I do not want to blame the teacher in any way, although I was scared too leaving BTS night.
I will. This teacher is putting his own ego above the students's learning, compensating for his own insecurity by lording over the students that he is better at math than they are.
My excellent AP teacher said that when he gives a test, he times himself doing it, and then gives the kids triple that time.
You are making stuff up. Why would you jump to that conclusion? Perhaps the students in question are just ill-prepared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.
While it's great to have a plan, I wouldn't want one of my students to risk being unhappy and stressed in Honors PC on the belief that he wants to be physicist major 4 years from now. It's quite possible that his interests may change. (He hasn't even had high school physics yet.) On the other hand, if hard work and a tutor can help him persevere without ill effect, then Honors PC could work out fine.
I do question a year of AB followed by a year of BC. Except for a few objectives, BC is the same course as AB for 8 units before the 2 units that are exclusive to BC. In other words, he would get the entire AB course all over again while in BC. Not a tragedy, but a better path might be AB or BC, then multivariable, then AP Stat. A good thing to discuss with a counselor.
There is nothing wrong with doing AB followed by BC. It's not uncommon and will build a strong foundation for someone who wants to major in physics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.
While it's great to have a plan, I wouldn't want one of my students to risk being unhappy and stressed in Honors PC on the belief that he wants to be physicist major 4 years from now. It's quite possible that his interests may change. (He hasn't even had high school physics yet.) On the other hand, if hard work and a tutor can help him persevere without ill effect, then Honors PC could work out fine.
I do question a year of AB followed by a year of BC. Except for a few objectives, BC is the same course as AB for 8 units before the 2 units that are exclusive to BC. In other words, he would get the entire AB course all over again while in BC. Not a tragedy, but a better path might be AB or BC, then multivariable, then AP Stat. A good thing to discuss with a counselor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at Wootton in Honors PreCalc as well. The teacher is very intimidating and explained at BTS night that this will be a hard class. She said real math starts now and everything prior to this did not count. I was scared leaving BTS night. We have a tutor now once a week via Zoom. Not sure if it will help as we just started. NHS and advisory period can be used for help as well. Or before school this particular teacher is there for visits.
Is your child complaining that assessments are very short like 20 minutes for 10 problems? This has been one of my son’s issues. That said I do not want to blame the teacher in any way, although I was scared too leaving BTS night.
I will. This teacher is putting his own ego above the students's learning, compensating for his own insecurity by lording over the students that he is better at math than they are.
My excellent AP teacher said that when he gives a test, he times himself doing it, and then gives the kids triple that time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at Wootton in Honors PreCalc as well. The teacher is very intimidating and explained at BTS night that this will be a hard class. She said real math starts now and everything prior to this did not count. I was scared leaving BTS night. We have a tutor now once a week via Zoom. Not sure if it will help as we just started. NHS and advisory period can be used for help as well. Or before school this particular teacher is there for visits.
Is your child complaining that assessments are very short like 20 minutes for 10 problems? This has been one of my son’s issues. That said I do not want to blame the teacher in any way, although I was scared too leaving BTS night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.
While it's great to have a plan, I wouldn't want one of my students to risk being unhappy and stressed in Honors PC on the belief that he wants to be physicist major 4 years from now. It's quite possible that his interests may change. (He hasn't even had high school physics yet.) On the other hand, if hard work and a tutor can help him persevere without ill effect, then Honors PC could work out fine.
I do question a year of AB followed by a year of BC. Except for a few objectives, BC is the same course as AB for 8 units before the 2 units that are exclusive to BC. In other words, he would get the entire AB course all over again while in BC. Not a tragedy, but a better path might be AB or BC, then multivariable, then AP Stat. A good thing to discuss with a counselor.
Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.