Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great kids, but their competitive parents are a different question.
How do you know their parents are competitive? My kids spent 15 years (MS/HS) in MCPS magnet program. In 15 years, I have never met a so-called competitive parent. All parents seem nice to me. They are concerned about their kids just like all parents are (or should be).
I'm guessing that you're on the competitive-parent end of the scale yourself.
Competitive parents are a thing in the magnet programs. That doesn't mean that all magnet parents are competitive, or that no non-magnet parents are competitive. But there are definitely competitive magnet parents
What does that mean? Do they take the test for kids? Do they poison other kids??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great kids, but their competitive parents are a different question.
How do you know their parents are competitive? My kids spent 15 years (MS/HS) in MCPS magnet program. In 15 years, I have never met a so-called competitive parent. All parents seem nice to me. They are concerned about their kids just like all parents are (or should be).
I'm guessing that you're on the competitive-parent end of the scale yourself.
Competitive parents are a thing in the magnet programs. That doesn't mean that all magnet parents are competitive, or that no non-magnet parents are competitive. But there are definitely competitive magnet parents
What does that mean? Do they take the test for kids? Do they poison other kids??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great kids, but their competitive parents are a different question.
How do you know their parents are competitive? My kids spent 15 years (MS/HS) in MCPS magnet program. In 15 years, I have never met a so-called competitive parent. All parents seem nice to me. They are concerned about their kids just like all parents are (or should be).
I'm guessing that you're on the competitive-parent end of the scale yourself.
Competitive parents are a thing in the magnet programs. That doesn't mean that all magnet parents are competitive, or that no non-magnet parents are competitive. But there are definitely competitive magnet parents
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great kids, but their competitive parents are a different question.
How do you know their parents are competitive? My kids spent 15 years (MS/HS) in MCPS magnet program. In 15 years, I have never met a so-called competitive parent. All parents seem nice to me. They are concerned about their kids just like all parents are (or should be).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great kids, but their competitive parents are a different question.
How do you know their parents are competitive? My kids spent 15 years (MS/HS) in MCPS magnet program. In 15 years, I have never met a so-called competitive parent. All parents seem nice to me. They are concerned about their kids just like all parents are (or should be).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great kids, but their competitive parents are a different question.
How do you know their parents are competitive? My kids spent 15 years (MS/HS) in MCPS magnet program. In 15 years, I have never met a so-called competitive parent. All parents seem nice to me. They are concerned about their kids just like all parents are (or should be).
Anonymous wrote:OP, congratulation to your DC. Based on your descrition, your DC is a perfect child but he may be too good for the magnet.
My DS went there a few years ago. Let me tell you how bad it could be. Please dont subject your snowflasks to the brutal environment.
A lots of very mean kids who would answer other kids’ questions on homework after 9 pm. Many competitive parents offer to drive kids to math meet. The unintelligent kids could solve rubiks cubes in 8 sec. Some annoying kids announce test score in the classroom. Cold heart kids run around in the computer lab to help other kids to solve the issues in programing. However, some kids who have been cuddled in ES may not get any extra attention from the teachers and may realize that they are the smartest students.
Good luck on finding the best fit for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Some are really mean. Others are nice. Most are just dust in the wind to my son. Also, don't know if it's a 'thing' at other schools but the upperclassmen call the 6th graders 'sixies'. Thought it was really funny!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does the social stuff work if everybody is taking long bus rides to school? How do the kids get together to socialize outside of school? It seems like a lot of kids would just be too geographically spread out. How does it work?
On their phones, just like with the non-magnet kids.
Mines a rising 6th grader and doesn’t have a phone. :-/
You don't need a phone for stuff like Google Hangouts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They're all super attractive.
Actually, some of them tend to repel others.
Usually, magnet and non-magnet kids don't stick together.