Anonymous wrote:But why take college level material from people without PhD’s? Why finish college / start adult life at 20 instead of 21? What is the rush to end your youth and get on the treadmill that will dictate your next 50 years?
I was referring to the previous comment about the son who accelerated in K-12Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ746290.pdf - I suggest reading the introduction and the section titles "Outcomes of Acceleration and Nonacceleration"
Yeah, but this is college we’re talking about, not K-12. Age differences matter a lot less in adulthood. A nineteen-year-old simply doesn’t have the same advantages over an eighteen-year-old that a nine-year-old has over an eight-year-old.
You clearly clearly didn't read the articleAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ746290.pdf - I suggest reading the introduction and the section titles "Outcomes of Acceleration and Nonacceleration"
This. Generally, kids who are accelerated in school end up being less successful than those who aren’t.
Anonymous wrote:https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ746290.pdf - I suggest reading the introduction and the section titles "Outcomes of Acceleration and Nonacceleration"
Anonymous wrote:https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ746290.pdf - I suggest reading the introduction and the section titles "Outcomes of Acceleration and Nonacceleration"
And college classes are taught by grad students. What's your point? You don't need to be a professor to teach calculus.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many people think AP classes aren’t the equivalent of college classes.
They aren’t. They are taught by high school teachers.
No, they gave him and amazing young adulthood. I know I would have loved to be in his shoes as a young adult.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP classes are not equivalent of college classes. However, you get credits in college. That is good. It save $$$. DD uses the AP credits for non major credits. Most major classes - needs to take in college. DD is not rushing but finished BS in 2.5 years and 2 semester in Master - so like 3 years - heading to pHD in her 4th year of college at 21. DD is not rushing. It just turns out that way.
I can do better. My DS skipped ahead for 2 years in elementary school and graduated university in 3 years with double major at 18. Oh and he graduated with perfect 4.0 gpa and a great job in finance/AI.
Oh wow. You stole his young adulthood. He missed an entire formative period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP classes are not equivalent of college classes. However, you get credits in college. That is good. It save $$$. DD uses the AP credits for non major credits. Most major classes - needs to take in college. DD is not rushing but finished BS in 2.5 years and 2 semester in Master - so like 3 years - heading to pHD in her 4th year of college at 21. DD is not rushing. It just turns out that way.
I can do better. My DS skipped ahead for 2 years in elementary school and graduated university in 3 years with double major at 18. Oh and he graduated with perfect 4.0 gpa and a great job in finance/AI.
Oh wow. You stole his young adulthood. He missed an entire formative period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP classes are not equivalent of college classes. However, you get credits in college. That is good. It save $$$. DD uses the AP credits for non major credits. Most major classes - needs to take in college. DD is not rushing but finished BS in 2.5 years and 2 semester in Master - so like 3 years - heading to pHD in her 4th year of college at 21. DD is not rushing. It just turns out that way.
I can do better. My DS skipped ahead for 2 years in elementary school and graduated university in 3 years with double major at 18. Oh and he graduated with perfect 4.0 gpa and a great job in finance/AI.
People become envious and start criticizing acceleration as rushing because they only mostly see their own kids and their friends' kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP classes are not equivalent of college classes. However, you get credits in college. That is good. It save $$$. DD uses the AP credits for non major credits. Most major classes - needs to take in college. DD is not rushing but finished BS in 2.5 years and 2 semester in Master - so like 3 years - heading to pHD in her 4th year of college at 21. DD is not rushing. It just turns out that way.
I can do better. My DS skipped ahead for 2 years in elementary school and graduated university in 3 years with double major at 18. Oh and he graduated with perfect 4.0 gpa and a great job in finance/AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP classes are not equivalent of college classes. However, you get credits in college. That is good. It save $$$. DD uses the AP credits for non major credits. Most major classes - needs to take in college. DD is not rushing but finished BS in 2.5 years and 2 semester in Master - so like 3 years - heading to pHD in her 4th year of college at 21. DD is not rushing. It just turns out that way.
I can do better. My DS skipped ahead for 2 years in elementary school and graduated university in 3 years with double major at 18. Oh and he graduated with perfect 4.0 gpa and a great job in finance/AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom got remarried my freshman year and I lost all my financial aid. Stepdad did not contribute anything and my mom was a preschool teacher.
I overloaded ever semester + summers and graduated in 2.75 years. I wish I had more time but private T50s are $$$$ with no finaid. I went straight into a 6 year PhD program so I guess it all evens out in the end.
Did your mother not anticipate that development? Did she feel bad that her husband chipped in zero?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP classes are not equivalent of college classes. However, you get credits in college. That is good. It save $$$. DD uses the AP credits for non major credits. Most major classes - needs to take in college. DD is not rushing but finished BS in 2.5 years and 2 semester in Master - so like 3 years - heading to pHD in her 4th year of college at 21. DD is not rushing. It just turns out that way.
I can do better. My DS skipped ahead for 2 years in elementary school and graduated university in 3 years with double major at 18. Oh and he graduated with perfect 4.0 gpa and a great job in finance/AI.
Oh wow. You stole his young adulthood. He missed an entire formative period.