Anonymous wrote:Friend's kid is in a prep class and as soon as the test was over all the parents received an email congratulating their kids on working hard and taking the test but also asking them to ask the kids to share what was on the test (perhaps not those direct words)...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The thing anout those who prep starting in young grades (not just the summer begore 8th grade) that is so unnerving to me is that their parents must be deciding that TJ is who they must be (as opposed to the kids themselves saying "I think I'd be interested in a challenging school like TJ."
It seems to dismiss the kid's individuality in the equation of his or her life. As my kids are in upper elem and ms, I am realing how much they are their own persons....not mini-me. Hot-housing kids treats kids as though they are simply vessels for the parents' goals. This makes me sad for those who are "successful" at the task of getting into TJ after years of prepping.
Some kids fare better with closer guidance while others do better with less. There is no reason to judge these parents that want the best for their kids. Life will fix whatever is not working.
Anonymous wrote:lAnonymous wrote:Anyone know when the TJ make up test is for kids who were sick that day.
“sick”?![]()
It isn’t poste. In May take them a minute, because I know or a fact they give kids who were “sick” a different test. I have heard that they also mark it as a kid who missed initial testing, and discount very high scores, because cheating culture surrounding TJ. But that is just a rumor. The different test is nit n
lAnonymous wrote:Anyone know when the TJ make up test is for kids who were sick that day.
Anonymous wrote:And saying TJ is the best for their child in third grade is just wrong. TJ is not the best for everyone. Imagine the message that poor kid is hearing. He needs to get into TJ. If he doesn’t, the school he goes to isn't good. Or even worse - he isn’t good. By prepping them for so long, you are saying only TJ is acceptable. Awful message for a kid to hear.
Anonymous wrote:The thing anout those who prep starting in young grades (not just the summer begore 8th grade) that is so unnerving to me is that their parents must be deciding that TJ is who they must be (as opposed to the kids themselves saying "I think I'd be interested in a challenging school like TJ."
It seems to dismiss the kid's individuality in the equation of his or her life. As my kids are in upper elem and ms, I am realing how much they are their own persons....not mini-me. Hot-housing kids treats kids as though they are simply vessels for the parents' goals. This makes me sad for those who are "successful" at the task of getting into TJ after years of prepping.