Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, FCPS middle school students are going to FCPS high schools and doing fine. Those high school grads are off to fantastic colleges where they report (IME) that college is way easier than high school.
It is doing a fine job preparing them. I have a freshman in high school and a sophomore at a solid university and both are (so far) very successful.
Maybe your complaints are valid on an individual school/team level. I’m sure some schools implement AAP better than others. Across the county as a whole though, I don’t think you can fairly make generalizations.
Conversely, high school teachers complain that incoming students have no idea how to write at all, worse than previous years. Maybe your freshman in high school is representative. Maybe they're not.
Since all work is now being completed during class, parents can’t help. They are truly seeing what the students can do on their own. Maybe they should go back to assigning it outside of class. Parents will then help. Then they will think the students can write better. Problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which electives did your child choose? Perhaps they selected ones that are too easy for their skill level? As far as the core classes, you should make sure that your child is reading at least 1 hour per day after school from a high level book of your or their choosing. (Let me know if you would like suggestions for books.) Also, I would recommend that they do extra practice through Khan Academy for math. Perhaps 30 min per day? Your child should also be filling their free time with several hours of sports practice or exercise every day. Do they play an instrument?
Why do I need to be scheduling Khan academy and buying books and setting reading times? Also what about writing? Do I have to plan that too? This is 7th grade. Now I need to be a teacher to my kid for 2 hours a day?
Yes, if you want more rigor than you need to supply it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, FCPS middle school students are going to FCPS high schools and doing fine. Those high school grads are off to fantastic colleges where they report (IME) that college is way easier than high school.
It is doing a fine job preparing them. I have a freshman in high school and a sophomore at a solid university and both are (so far) very successful.
Maybe your complaints are valid on an individual school/team level. I’m sure some schools implement AAP better than others. Across the county as a whole though, I don’t think you can fairly make generalizations.
Conversely, high school teachers complain that incoming students have no idea how to write at all, worse than previous years. Maybe your freshman in high school is representative. Maybe they're not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which electives did your child choose? Perhaps they selected ones that are too easy for their skill level? As far as the core classes, you should make sure that your child is reading at least 1 hour per day after school from a high level book of your or their choosing. (Let me know if you would like suggestions for books.) Also, I would recommend that they do extra practice through Khan Academy for math. Perhaps 30 min per day? Your child should also be filling their free time with several hours of sports practice or exercise every day. Do they play an instrument?
Why do I need to be scheduling Khan academy and buying books and setting reading times? Also what about writing? Do I have to plan that too? This is 7th grade. Now I need to be a teacher to my kid for 2 hours a day?
Anonymous wrote:Or…wait for it…your opinion is different from the majority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, FCPS middle school students are going to FCPS high schools and doing fine. Those high school grads are off to fantastic colleges where they report (IME) that college is way easier than high school.
It is doing a fine job preparing them. I have a freshman in high school and a sophomore at a solid university and both are (so far) very successful.
Maybe your complaints are valid on an individual school/team level. I’m sure some schools implement AAP better than others. Across the county as a whole though, I don’t think you can fairly make generalizations.
Conversely, high school teachers complain that incoming students have no idea how to write at all, worse than previous years. Maybe your freshman in high school is representative. Maybe they're not.
Anonymous wrote:OP, FCPS middle school students are going to FCPS high schools and doing fine. Those high school grads are off to fantastic colleges where they report (IME) that college is way easier than high school.
It is doing a fine job preparing them. I have a freshman in high school and a sophomore at a solid university and both are (so far) very successful.
Maybe your complaints are valid on an individual school/team level. I’m sure some schools implement AAP better than others. Across the county as a whole though, I don’t think you can fairly make generalizations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What middle school, OP? My kids went through AAP at Rocky Run, to advanced classes at Chantilly HS, to T10 universities. We all found the curriculum to be appropriate.
That was awhile ago. It's since been watered down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a life, Tiger Mom.
My kid can handle a lot more especially in English and yet there is no work. Then I've seen kids struggle and drop out of classes in high school or college. Why wait so long? My child isn't in 2nd grade anymore. They can handle 1 hour of homework a day.
“Afternoons are too busy to make up for the lack of rigor during the day”, but you want an hour of homework?
Why though? Why can't they just be kids before high school hits them? Don't they deserve free time?