Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The difference is parents of gifted/academically talented kids that are ‘bored’ in class but have no behavior issues generally don’t bring up to other parents up how bored their child is or may be because class is soooo easy. It’s rude.
The parents that do bring up how bored their kids are are usually training to justify why their child is a PIA in class, whether they are smart or not
1. There are a lot of socially clueless people out there. They might not understand how it would be rude.
2. The parent knows that the other parents' child is very smart or advanced, too. So, they're assuming that the other parents' child is also complaining of boredom at school, and they're trying to compare notes.
Wait, you're affirming this absurd opinion that it is rude/offensive to mention to someone that your child is bored at school? This is neither rude nor offensive, people. There are a zillion reasons kids could be bored at school, and it does not imply that the kids are misbehaving or that the parents are bragging about the kids' intelligence!!! Talk about clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you can comfortably afford private, I would at least look into it and see what your options are.
My kids are now in 6th and 9th and I'm really wishing they had gone to private school. We live in a wealthy neighborhood where most people use public school but there are still a lot of issues with public education and the inability to advance the curriculum for kids who learn more quickly. My kids are too old and don't want to switch schools now, plus where we live there are no good private options within a 20 minute drive. So we try to push them as much as we can, but school is just really easy and boring for them. Its such a disappointment and if I had it to do all over again, I'd probably move somewhere closer to a good private school and buy a less expensive house to make it more affordable. Hindsight is 20/20.
Op here. We moved to this school district for the supposedly excellent schools. We live in a multi million dollar home and have spent almost another million on renovations to make it our exact style. The privates we are considering are 20+ min away while we currently live 1-2 miles from our zoned elementary, middle and high school. I feel like we have sunk so much money into this house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The difference is parents of gifted/academically talented kids that are ‘bored’ in class but have no behavior issues generally don’t bring up to other parents up how bored their child is or may be because class is soooo easy. It’s rude.
The parents that do bring up how bored their kids are are usually training to justify why their child is a PIA in class, whether they are smart or not
1. There are a lot of socially clueless people out there. They might not understand how it would be rude.
2. The parent knows that the other parents' child is very smart or advanced, too. So, they're assuming that the other parents' child is also complaining of boredom at school, and they're trying to compare notes.
Wait, you're affirming this absurd opinion that it is rude/offensive to mention to someone that your child is bored at school? This is neither rude nor offensive, people. There are a zillion reasons kids could be bored at school, and it does not imply that the kids are misbehaving or that the parents are bragging about the kids' intelligence!!! Talk about clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The difference is parents of gifted/academically talented kids that are ‘bored’ in class but have no behavior issues generally don’t bring up to other parents up how bored their child is or may be because class is soooo easy. It’s rude.
The parents that do bring up how bored their kids are are usually training to justify why their child is a PIA in class, whether they are smart or not
1. There are a lot of socially clueless people out there. They might not understand how it would be rude.
2. The parent knows that the other parents' child is very smart or advanced, too. So, they're assuming that the other parents' child is also complaining of boredom at school, and they're trying to compare notes.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, many smart kids are bored at school because they are advanced and perhaps also being enriched at home by parents.
Many not smart kids are also bored at school because they have learning difficulties or are special needs. For them school is overwhelming and they do not enjoy academics.
These two kinds of boredom is not the same, regardless of people trying to lump these two together. Many people claim that their child is GTLD, but this is true only if getting these kids in a magnet track that accommodates them will make their boredom and bahavioral issues disappear. This is not true for the majority of GTLD identified kids in magnet program.
Anyhoo, what parents need to do is get the kids the enrichment and acceleration at home. Through paid programs, free online programs, teaching them themselves etc.
Anonymous wrote:I have heard parents say this in preschool, elementary and now middle school. The worst behaved kid at our preschool was supposedly bored so he acted out and hit and bit classmates. I have a kindergarten child who loves kindergarten and I find it insulting when parents say their kid is bored. They are implying that their kid is so much smarter and more advanced than the other kids in the class. I have 3 kids and they all do well in school. They are happy and don’t complain they are bored. They get good grades with minimal effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you can comfortably afford private, I would at least look into it and see what your options are.
My kids are now in 6th and 9th and I'm really wishing they had gone to private school. We live in a wealthy neighborhood where most people use public school but there are still a lot of issues with public education and the inability to advance the curriculum for kids who learn more quickly. My kids are too old and don't want to switch schools now, plus where we live there are no good private options within a 20 minute drive. So we try to push them as much as we can, but school is just really easy and boring for them. Its such a disappointment and if I had it to do all over again, I'd probably move somewhere closer to a good private school and buy a less expensive house to make it more affordable. Hindsight is 20/20.
Op here. We moved to this school district for the supposedly excellent schools. We live in a multi million dollar home and have spent almost another million on renovations to make it our exact style. The privates we are considering are 20+ min away while we currently live 1-2 miles from our zoned elementary, middle and high school. I feel like we have sunk so much money into this house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you can comfortably afford private, I would at least look into it and see what your options are.
My kids are now in 6th and 9th and I'm really wishing they had gone to private school. We live in a wealthy neighborhood where most people use public school but there are still a lot of issues with public education and the inability to advance the curriculum for kids who learn more quickly. My kids are too old and don't want to switch schools now, plus where we live there are no good private options within a 20 minute drive. So we try to push them as much as we can, but school is just really easy and boring for them. Its such a disappointment and if I had it to do all over again, I'd probably move somewhere closer to a good private school and buy a less expensive house to make it more affordable. Hindsight is 20/20.
Op here. We moved to this school district for the supposedly excellent schools. We live in a multi million dollar home and have spent almost another million on renovations to make it our exact style. The privates we are considering are 20+ min away while we currently live 1-2 miles from our zoned elementary, middle and high school. I feel like we have sunk so much money into this house.
Huh, with TWO Ivy League educations and the fact that you learned to read at 3, you'd think you'd have been decision making skills that this. Maybe when you were sitting around reading chapter books while the other children learned their letters, the teacher should have noticed and taught you some common sense.
Anonymous wrote:The difference is parents of gifted/academically talented kids that are ‘bored’ in class but have no behavior issues generally don’t bring up to other parents up how bored their child is or may be because class is soooo easy. It’s rude.
The parents that do bring up how bored their kids are are usually training to justify why their child is a PIA in class, whether they are smart or not
Anonymous wrote:The difference is parents of gifted/academically talented kids that are ‘bored’ in class but have no behavior issues generally don’t bring up to other parents up how bored their child is or may be because class is soooo easy. It’s rude.
The parents that do bring up how bored their kids are are usually training to justify why their child is a PIA in class, whether they are smart or not
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you can comfortably afford private, I would at least look into it and see what your options are.
My kids are now in 6th and 9th and I'm really wishing they had gone to private school. We live in a wealthy neighborhood where most people use public school but there are still a lot of issues with public education and the inability to advance the curriculum for kids who learn more quickly. My kids are too old and don't want to switch schools now, plus where we live there are no good private options within a 20 minute drive. So we try to push them as much as we can, but school is just really easy and boring for them. Its such a disappointment and if I had it to do all over again, I'd probably move somewhere closer to a good private school and buy a less expensive house to make it more affordable. Hindsight is 20/20.
Op here. We moved to this school district for the supposedly excellent schools. We live in a multi million dollar home and have spent almost another million on renovations to make it our exact style. The privates we are considering are 20+ min away while we currently live 1-2 miles from our zoned elementary, middle and high school. I feel like we have sunk so much money into this house.