Anonymous wrote:Most kids graduate from public schools so they never really find out that they inflate grades and abilities. OP has seen the light and it's a train coming at her kid. Meet with the school and see what they can offer and then fill in the gaps with tutors. It is going to be $$$ though.
Anonymous wrote:It's our first year in a private, 8th grade. However, our son was completely unprepared and is failing everything. Apparently his "world class" education from FCPS was somewhat lacking. He can't write a paragraph, spell three-syllable words, use basic punctuation and capitalization, do enough research to write a short report, take notes, or efficiently study for tests. The school has given us a learning specialist, a counselor, and an accommodation plan (although the only "disability" he has is a public school education and a missing year where he had "virtual"). He was a good student before - A's and B's only. They have called us into a meeting next week to talk about his lack of progress. Should I be worried?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is DC at SAAS by any chance?
SAAS has essays for admission.
Anonymous wrote:OP is DC at SAAS by any chance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he didn’t have to write essays, it’s not a rigorous school. Which is good news! They will be much more willing to work with you.
Do rigorous schools have student essays for Middle School admissions? I thought that started in HS admissions.
All the schools my kids applied to in middle school required testing and essays (this was pre-pandemic). This is not a comment about rigor, rather that all schools I am familiar with required an application that required work on behalf of my kid.
I am with the other poster - if your child is having trouble with three letter words in 8th grade, that feels odd. Presumably he had to spell three letter words at previous schools. Could be some mental health or larger problem going on. It sounds like you are no focused on him, which will probably be a big help to him.
Good luck!
OP here, now I see why everyone is saying troll. I said - or meant to say - three SYLLABLE words. Like "rigorus."
Anonymous wrote:I was this kid! First thing I would do is listen to the child. It’s possible child knows that s/hé is the worst in the class and also the “problem” child. Child may also feel guilty for letting parents / school down, and maybe even ashamed of themselves. I would also not let my fear of child getting kicked out get to my kid as child may very well be absorbing parental fear and making it child’s own. Tutors can be a mixed bag. Some were helpful, others just compounded the issue. Every time I had a well-intentioned tutor get frustrated with me, it was the pits.
What saved me: I had this teacher I used to be able to talk to, and one day, I blurted out that I didn’t have to be the best student, I just didn’t want to be the worst anymore. It turned out the journey from worst to second worst was far easier to overcome than any other goal set for me. In the process of getting there, a lot of confusing things that made my head swirl from skills to content started to make more sense. The realization that I could make sense of this world became my motivation to improve from there.
Anonymous wrote:Somehow, a lot of his peers in his public school can do those things.
Anonymous wrote:It's our first year in a private, 8th grade. However, our son was completely unprepared and is failing everything. Apparently his "world class" education from FCPS was somewhat lacking. He can't write a paragraph, spell three-syllable words, use basic punctuation and capitalization, do enough research to write a short report, take notes, or efficiently study for tests. The school has given us a learning specialist, a counselor, and an accommodation plan (although the only "disability" he has is a public school education and a missing year where he had "virtual"). He was a good student before - A's and B's only. They have called us into a meeting next week to talk about his lack of progress. Should I be worried?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like your kid never bothered to study in public school OP, and you didn't push him. Now he has to catch up.
I think the issue is that OP thought her kid was studying fine in public because he was.getting goog grades. Because of holes in the public curriculum and the difference with private, her kid is now struggling.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like your kid never bothered to study in public school OP, and you didn't push him. Now he has to catch up.
Anonymous wrote:I have found my kids have fallen behind in math since coming back from virtual school.