Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the teacher of that hard class, your son is making a mature, responsible choice.
I had 6 kids miss my class last week for a mid day band concert. They have now been behind all week and will struggle to catch up before Friday’s test.
I don’t know why performances have to be during the school day.
I can't imagine how missing one day of class for a school-related activity would cause someone to be this behind unless one or both teachers were being intentionally punitive.
OP here - teacher for this class is amazing. Incredibly dedicated and gifted teacher - not punitive. But he has extremely high standards and class moves very quickly. DS does not want to miss class because the teachers is such a good lecturer so it is hard to recreate the in-class learning with just the text book or videos. DS already decided to pass on the spring amusement park band trip because it would require missing this class. (It is a block schedule school so missing one class is really like missing two classes).
I agree with your son. But part of making this mature decision is to talk to band teacher about it- not to simply skip. Maybe band teacher will excuse h8m, maybe he’ll still get a zero for missing- but the teacher should know where he is, why he didn’t attend, and have the opportunity to adjust the music for his sectional if it’s needed.
This. He talks to both teachers and makes a decision and clearly communicates. Stay out of the decision OP but counsel him to do this.
I’m interested that people are suggesting he talk to the band teacher ahead of time. He was worried that the teacher would try to step in and force him to miss the class. At my job we constantly say sometimes it’s better to beg for forgiveness than ask for permission. This seemed like it might be one of those situations.
No this is not one of those times and is completely unacceptable. You are teaching your son the wrong way to handle this.
The teacher is busy and stressed and over 100 kids and you think he’s going to have time to “force” your kid to go? You’re crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like someone let him make a huge mistake in registering for an AP class as a freshman. He wasn't ready and he is stressed. I would make sure he transfers to the appropriate level for second semester.
If music is something that this kid is serious about, he needs to meet with the AP teacher and come up with a solution that allows him to go to the Band concert. Losing music would have a much bigger impact on him long term than a poor grade in a semester of a class he shouldn't have been in in the first place.
OP here. This is an AP class only open to freshmen. My son has an A in the class. He belongs in the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like someone let him make a huge mistake in registering for an AP class as a freshman. He wasn't ready and he is stressed. I would make sure he transfers to the appropriate level for second semester.
If music is something that this kid is serious about, he needs to meet with the AP teacher and come up with a solution that allows him to go to the Band concert. Losing music would have a much bigger impact on him long term than a poor grade in a semester of a class he shouldn't have been in in the first place.
Why would this be any different if the kid were a senior? AP classes, if taught right, are supposed to be hard. They're supposed to be taught at a real college level, and you're not just supposed to casually skip them. If kids can miss classes and it is no big deal, then the class is not really taught at a college level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like someone let him make a huge mistake in registering for an AP class as a freshman. He wasn't ready and he is stressed. I would make sure he transfers to the appropriate level for second semester.
If music is something that this kid is serious about, he needs to meet with the AP teacher and come up with a solution that allows him to go to the Band concert. Losing music would have a much bigger impact on him long term than a poor grade in a semester of a class he shouldn't have been in in the first place.
OP here. This is an AP class only open to freshmen. My son has an A in the class. He belongs in the class.
Anonymous wrote:My son in a similar situation asked the AP teacher if he could attend the AP class during another class period. Then he went to his PE teacher and asked if he could make up a PE class by coming before school or doing lunch because he was in a band performance and had to make up an AP class.
So he went to AP class first period instead of PE then missed 3rd period AP class. Then the day before the performance he did extra PE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As the teacher of that hard class, your son is making a mature, responsible choice.
I had 6 kids miss my class last week for a mid day band concert. They have now been behind all week and will struggle to catch up before Friday’s test.
I don’t know why performances have to be during the school day.
I can't imagine how missing one day of class for a school-related activity would cause someone to be this behind unless one or both teachers were being intentionally punitive.
OP here - teacher for this class is amazing. Incredibly dedicated and gifted teacher - not punitive. But he has extremely high standards and class moves very quickly. DS does not want to miss class because the teachers is such a good lecturer so it is hard to recreate the in-class learning with just the text book or videos. DS already decided to pass on the spring amusement park band trip because it would require missing this class. (It is a block schedule school so missing one class is really like missing two classes).
I agree with your son. But part of making this mature decision is to talk to band teacher about it- not to simply skip. Maybe band teacher will excuse h8m, maybe he’ll still get a zero for missing- but the teacher should know where he is, why he didn’t attend, and have the opportunity to adjust the music for his sectional if it’s needed.
This. He talks to both teachers and makes a decision and clearly communicates. Stay out of the decision OP but counsel him to do this.
I’m interested that people are suggesting he talk to the band teacher ahead of time. He was worried that the teacher would try to step in and force him to miss the class. At my job we constantly say sometimes it’s better to beg for forgiveness than ask for permission. This seemed like it might be one of those situations.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like someone let him make a huge mistake in registering for an AP class as a freshman. He wasn't ready and he is stressed. I would make sure he transfers to the appropriate level for second semester.
If music is something that this kid is serious about, he needs to meet with the AP teacher and come up with a solution that allows him to go to the Band concert. Losing music would have a much bigger impact on him long term than a poor grade in a semester of a class he shouldn't have been in in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like someone let him make a huge mistake in registering for an AP class as a freshman. He wasn't ready and he is stressed. I would make sure he transfers to the appropriate level for second semester.
If music is something that this kid is serious about, he needs to meet with the AP teacher and come up with a solution that allows him to go to the Band concert. Losing music would have a much bigger impact on him long term than a poor grade in a semester of a class he shouldn't have been in in the first place.