Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to know how good these kids would do on testing and grade if EVERY SINGLE parent stopped teaching at home or paying for tutors. Seriously, I don't think the schools have any idea what a crappy job they are doing!
+1000. Our kids attend private school and the school loves to take credit for high test scores but it's really the parents hiring tutors/doing extra work.
Argghhh... Which one? I don't want to go there!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have to disagree with this based upon recent experiences of trying to get kids into college. Today's colleges (not the one I went to) expect to see calculus finished by the time your kid applies - preferably finished by the end of jr. year, so the calculus grade is on the transcript when your kid applies EA or ED. That means having taken Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry, pre-cal, and calculus finished by end of junior year. One of our kids made it only through the first three but he cannot continue in his major if he doesn't finish calculus at the college level soon. Having learned that the hard way, I am making sure that kid no. 2 is taking calculus now in junior year of high school. I'm not saying that was easy - and he had to take summer math courses, but he will finish calculus by end of junior year - and that is what colleges want to see on the transcript (they don't care what your major is going to be, unless you applying to the rare school, like VT, which require applications to your college of choice at the entry level. In most cases, the only serious review your kids' application will get is a cursory check of SAT or ACT scores, GPA (with notations about breadth and depth of coursework), which are put on front of the file, along with any notes having to do with URM, legacy, athletics. Only if you make it through that cut, will they ever get to your child's essay and rarely will they care about what your kid wants to major in. SO my advice to OP is to hangin in there with the tutor and keep at it - switch tutors if this one isn't working - and work closely with the high school. But if you seriously want her to do well in the college sweepstakes, she will have to have far more than just a D- in Algebra I. And this applies to all colleges for the simple reason: Colleges and Universities don't want to be teaching geometry, pre-calc or calculus. They want the high schools to do it. Often the first question in my first kid's interviews was "Have you finished calculus?". I'm not saying this is the correct way to run our universities but it is the truth: they don't want to have to hire adjuncts to teacher "lower-level" math courses so you really need to be strong on math in the application process and, of course, reflect that skill in the SAT and ACT. So tutor on! BTW, NOVA and your community colleges have math courses, as well. Once our son finishes calculus this junior year, he will take an advanced math college-level course this summer, so that entry will be on his resume, too, next fall.
This is just wrong, wrong, wrong.
No, it's not. All admissions personnel will tell you that they look at the GPA, but most important, the depth of study. So a 4.0 in regular classes (not AP or Honors) doesn't cut it. They cull first on SAT scores and GPA (weighted) and only after you have passed that hurdle will the admissions people get into the file. You have to understand that these schools are getting 33,000 to 35,000 applications and that number is only increasing as international students are now actively in the fray. They want to see a string of AP courses, solidly in math and English, xlnt test scores and all the other stuff. And then they will take only 3% of the 35,000 because the other 3% got in on EA and are legacies, athletes or URM. Sorry, that's just the way the system works now. It's a whole different world than when I went through the system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have to disagree with this based upon recent experiences of trying to get kids into college. Today's colleges (not the one I went to) expect to see calculus finished by the time your kid applies - preferably finished by the end of jr. year, so the calculus grade is on the transcript when your kid applies EA or ED. That means having taken Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry, pre-cal, and calculus finished by end of junior year. One of our kids made it only through the first three but he cannot continue in his major if he doesn't finish calculus at the college level soon. Having learned that the hard way, I am making sure that kid no. 2 is taking calculus now in junior year of high school. I'm not saying that was easy - and he had to take summer math courses, but he will finish calculus by end of junior year - and that is what colleges want to see on the transcript (they don't care what your major is going to be, unless you applying to the rare school, like VT, which require applications to your college of choice at the entry level. In most cases, the only serious review your kids' application will get is a cursory check of SAT or ACT scores, GPA (with notations about breadth and depth of coursework), which are put on front of the file, along with any notes having to do with URM, legacy, athletics. Only if you make it through that cut, will they ever get to your child's essay and rarely will they care about what your kid wants to major in. SO my advice to OP is to hangin in there with the tutor and keep at it - switch tutors if this one isn't working - and work closely with the high school. But if you seriously want her to do well in the college sweepstakes, she will have to have far more than just a D- in Algebra I. And this applies to all colleges for the simple reason: Colleges and Universities don't want to be teaching geometry, pre-calc or calculus. They want the high schools to do it. Often the first question in my first kid's interviews was "Have you finished calculus?". I'm not saying this is the correct way to run our universities but it is the truth: they don't want to have to hire adjuncts to teacher "lower-level" math courses so you really need to be strong on math in the application process and, of course, reflect that skill in the SAT and ACT. So tutor on! BTW, NOVA and your community colleges have math courses, as well. Once our son finishes calculus this junior year, he will take an advanced math college-level course this summer, so that entry will be on his resume, too, next fall.
This is just wrong, wrong, wrong.
No, it's not. All admissions personnel will tell you that they look at the GPA, but most important, the depth of study. So a 4.0 in regular classes (not AP or Honors) doesn't cut it. They cull first on SAT scores and GPA (weighted) and only after you have passed that hurdle will the admissions people get into the file. You have to understand that these schools are getting 33,000 to 35,000 applications and that number is only increasing as international students are now actively in the fray. They want to see a string of AP courses, solidly in math and English, xlnt test scores and all the other stuff. And then they will take only 3% of the 35,000 because the other 3% got in on EA and are legacies, athletes or URM. Sorry, that's just the way the system works now. It's a whole different world than when I went through the system.
Anonymous wrote:Alot of kids who struggle in Algebra never really mastered some of the basic middle school math (proportion/ratio/fractions, etc.) Might be worth reviewing some of that with her. My understanding of research on kids who don't do well in Algebra/Cal is that many of them have some underlying misconceptions about basic math that get in the way. Focusing on the actual algebra may not be the answer. Hopefully a good tutor will understand that but I would consider it....
Khan videos are quite good.
Anonymous wrote:My DD also had a very hard time with algebra, but did much better in geometry. We used a tutor once a week, but it was kind of hit or miss if she'd do well on tests or not.
My DD is not interested in a STEM field, so I think it's not that big a deal if she's not getting very good grades in math. She limped through algebra II with a C and attempted precalc the first two weeks this year, but was just miserable.
She's taking a class called quantitative literacy instead and is thrilled with finally learning real world math. She'd always say that numbers and letters should mix and that she knew the quadratic equation but not how to do her taxes. Right now in math she's doing a project pricing out a dream vacation (Italy in her case), including calculating the exchange rate. It's so much more engaging for her.
Anonymous wrote:Now a days poor math skills will be a major issue at securing a job. Ironically poor english skills is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:C or lower is basically an F by previous year standards. You need to act now, tutor, boot camps, quit all activities, ground her etc... she is destroying her future.
You would ground a child who is trying very hard and struggling, as OP says?
What exactly are you punishing? That's no different to me than grounding a child who can't hit a certain time in a foot race or can't master a difficult piano piece despite trying. I'm not saying do nothing, but punishment? She's not DOING anything wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, freshmen in high school do Algebra 1? Because at my child's school, everyone has done Algebra 1 in 7th or 8th grade. And we aren't zoned to the best middle school in the DC area.
+1. OP's daughter should be further along by this stage. Algebra I and II and sometimes even Geometry have been pushed down to the middle school level. That clears the way in high school for pre-calculus, calculus, computer math, linear equations, statistics, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, freshmen in high school do Algebra 1? Because at my child's school, everyone has done Algebra 1 in 7th or 8th grade. And we aren't zoned to the best middle school in the DC area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have to disagree with this based upon recent experiences of trying to get kids into college. Today's colleges (not the one I went to) expect to see calculus finished by the time your kid applies - preferably finished by the end of jr. year, so the calculus grade is on the transcript when your kid applies EA or ED. That means having taken Algebra I, Algebra II, Geometry, pre-cal, and calculus finished by end of junior year. One of our kids made it only through the first three but he cannot continue in his major if he doesn't finish calculus at the college level soon. Having learned that the hard way, I am making sure that kid no. 2 is taking calculus now in junior year of high school. I'm not saying that was easy - and he had to take summer math courses, but he will finish calculus by end of junior year - and that is what colleges want to see on the transcript (they don't care what your major is going to be, unless you applying to the rare school, like VT, which require applications to your college of choice at the entry level. In most cases, the only serious review your kids' application will get is a cursory check of SAT or ACT scores, GPA (with notations about breadth and depth of coursework), which are put on front of the file, along with any notes having to do with URM, legacy, athletics. Only if you make it through that cut, will they ever get to your child's essay and rarely will they care about what your kid wants to major in. SO my advice to OP is to hangin in there with the tutor and keep at it - switch tutors if this one isn't working - and work closely with the high school. But if you seriously want her to do well in the college sweepstakes, she will have to have far more than just a D- in Algebra I. And this applies to all colleges for the simple reason: Colleges and Universities don't want to be teaching geometry, pre-calc or calculus. They want the high schools to do it. Often the first question in my first kid's interviews was "Have you finished calculus?". I'm not saying this is the correct way to run our universities but it is the truth: they don't want to have to hire adjuncts to teacher "lower-level" math courses so you really need to be strong on math in the application process and, of course, reflect that skill in the SAT and ACT. So tutor on! BTW, NOVA and your community colleges have math courses, as well. Once our son finishes calculus this junior year, he will take an advanced math college-level course this summer, so that entry will be on his resume, too, next fall.
This is just wrong, wrong, wrong.