Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For math-talented kids, never. That's the problem with acceleration. It misses the point. Your child should get enrichment or pursue other non math interests.
we live in the DCC acceleration beyond Algebra in 7th wasn't an option unlike WPES but DC is a sophomore at SMCS taking magnet equivalent of Calc BC and almost never studies
What is WPES?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think part of the problem is the testing. My dad is math professor and whenever he creates a problem on the test that wasn't explicitly covered in his undergraduate class, the majority of students will fail that problem and complain that it wasn't covered in the class. The students who took the time to learn will be able to figure the problem out, but very few students do that.
Would like to add that he's a professor at a top 15 school, so there's really no excuse for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For math-talented kids, never. That's the problem with acceleration. It misses the point. Your child should get enrichment or pursue other non math interests.
we live in the DCC acceleration beyond Algebra in 7th wasn't an option unlike WPES but DC is a sophomore at SMCS taking magnet equivalent of Calc BC and almost never studies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For math-talented kids, never. That's the problem with acceleration. It misses the point. Your child should get enrichment or pursue other non math interests.
we live in the DCC acceleration beyond Algebra in 7th wasn't an option unlike WPES but DC is a sophomore at SMCS taking magnet equivalent of Calc BC and almost never studies
I don't know of any MCPS school where Alg 1 in 6th is offered as a public option. Parents need to ask the math coordinator at their school to do a placement test for their kid. Since very few families know about this (MCPS does its best to not tell anyone), it usually happens by word of mouth - which is why it happens at very few schools. I don't know what WPES is or how they do it over there, but at Westland MS (Bethesda), a few kids took Alg 1 in 6th. They tested in the summer before 6th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For me, took AP Calculus as a freshmen in HS then took math at local colleges throughout the rest of hs. Breezed through all of it until I hit diff eq and it killed me. Worked my butt off and still ended up with a D in the course. That's when I knew I was not going to be a math major in college (and didn't take a single math course in college).
Diff equ has very little to do with a math major in college. Maybe physics or engineering.
It's absolutely wild that you gave up on college math before you even started, based on one bad semester at a school not designed for a student like you. You probably could have done a lot more and better in math if you rushed a little less and took time to learn more deeply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For math-talented kids, never. That's the problem with acceleration. It misses the point. Your child should get enrichment or pursue other non math interests.
we live in the DCC acceleration beyond Algebra in 7th wasn't an option unlike WPES but DC is a sophomore at SMCS taking magnet equivalent of Calc BC and almost never studies
Anonymous wrote:I think part of the problem is the testing. My dad is math professor and whenever he creates a problem on the test that wasn't explicitly covered in his undergraduate class, the majority of students will fail that problem and complain that it wasn't covered in the class. The students who took the time to learn will be able to figure the problem out, but very few students do that.
Anonymous wrote:For math-talented kids, never. That's the problem with acceleration. It misses the point. Your child should get enrichment or pursue other non math interests.
Anonymous wrote:Calc 2 freshman year of college for my lazy kid. He decided to become a humanities major because it requires less effort. Time will tell how that decision will work out for him.