Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Lucifer is knocking.
Seriously. This, AGAIN?? OP, Algebra I in 9th grade is perfectly fine. Move on.
Get a brain! So tired of young dull people here.
People with a brain know Algebra 1 in 9th is not a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Your son IS doomed for competitive colleges. Many non competitive colleges, he is not doomed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Lucifer is knocking.
Seriously. This, AGAIN?? OP, Algebra I in 9th grade is perfectly fine. Move on.
Get a brain! So tired of young dull people here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Lucifer is knocking.
Seriously. This, AGAIN?? OP, Algebra I in 9th grade is perfectly fine. Move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do public schools offer all math classes in the summer?
FCPS does. It’s online for most schools. But only Honors in geometry. I would not have a kid do summer A2 or Pre-Calc. And I would not have a math kid settle for the non-Honors 5 week version. If you are going to accelerate, take Geometry and A1 together. Or summer Honors geometry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SAT includes precalc and most kids take that in11th grade. Your DS won’t have precalc until senior year so you’ll probably want to think about extra SAT math prep.
I thought the SAT only went up through Algebra II
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP we are going to CHC as well. I’ve set up 4-6 hr of tutoring over next 2 weeks (we use Huntington learning center in timonium) and I expect DS will test out at that point. (He got a 62 in the first round.) it might be worth trying if he’s already taken Alg 1 - use the practice test to guide the tutor. But 4-8 hr of tutoring vs a whole class seems like an easy call. Just ask for a date in a few weeks for the retest. Worth a try at least. I’ve found them to be very accommodating.
OP again. He scored a 44 so not even close to testing out. Sigh. Oh well. Maybe he can work on Khan Academy this summer. He took Algebra 1 in 7th and didn't do well. I had him retake it in 8th and he is ending the year with a B. He did the study guide that CH put on their website but there were 2-3 pages on it that he didn't know. He hadn't covered any of it in 7th or 8th grade. So who knows? I was looking through their publications yesterday and it seems like the vast majority of boys take Algebra 1 in 9th grade. Maybe the test really is hard.
https://issuu.com/calverthallcollegehighschool/docs/web.version_calvert.hall.magazine.s
See page 7 for a profile of their incoming freshman class from a few years ago.
Anonymous wrote:SAT includes precalc and most kids take that in11th grade. Your DS won’t have precalc until senior year so you’ll probably want to think about extra SAT math prep.
Anonymous wrote:OP we are going to CHC as well. I’ve set up 4-6 hr of tutoring over next 2 weeks (we use Huntington learning center in timonium) and I expect DS will test out at that point. (He got a 62 in the first round.) it might be worth trying if he’s already taken Alg 1 - use the practice test to guide the tutor. But 4-8 hr of tutoring vs a whole class seems like an easy call. Just ask for a date in a few weeks for the retest. Worth a try at least. I’ve found them to be very accommodating.
Anonymous wrote:
There is a difference between sufficient knowledge and general intelligence. Your child has the latter but not the former. In his case, I recommend he prep over the summer and take the placement test again. It’s a question of not letting doors close in high school, OP. My son will be taking Honors Algebra 2 in 9th, after taking Algebra 1 and Geometry, and he’s not particularly gifted in math.
Anonymous wrote:I think the pendulum is already swinging back. Parents thought they had the secret sauce with acceleration and “most rigorous course-load ever!!!” I don’t think this is proving to be the case any more. High SAT. High GPA. And show a passion and work ethic in something outside school. All this will get you into the crapshoot that is top 100 college admissions.
Sure, if you want to go the route of having a super-passion in math take all the math courses available—but don’t think that’s enough.