Anonymous wrote:Geometry by 8th is considered the lower track in math in Moco, Arlington, and Fairfax. Yet it is the highest math track offered at the strongest school in dcps. Pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:The math complaints seem to all boil down to the lack of a sure way for a student to take differential equations and/or linear algebra in or by 12th grade. Because that would be the point of all of the earlier math acceleration, right?
Does the fact that students in public schools in DC don’t have this track available to them (at least not without a dual college enrollment option) make DC an “atrocity” or a “failing” school system far behind others? How many other school districts offer this pathway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Every high school that offers calc will allow a 10th grader to take it, if they have the prerequisites. And DCPS routinely allows outliers to take those prerequisites independently on an accelerated basis. You’re just mad that there’s no lockstep program that forces a large portion of the student body to accelerate to calc in 10th based on 6th grade math placement.
Please stop being obtuse. DCPS offers no track during the school year from middle school on for any student to successfully get to AP Cal by 10th - absolutely NONE.
So kids are forced to take geometry and Algebra 2 as summer courses to get there. Not ideal to cram a year of math in the summer and just sets up weak foundations. And who wants to spend their summers taking classes rather than having fun.
Now Deal is the only school offering to some kids to double up in Geometry and Algebra 2 in 8th. Also not ideal trying to juggle 2 math classes at once. In addition, the kids have to come to school EARLY to take the 2nd math class. Then they can take preCal in 9th at JR but it is not a true tracking class, because it’s any kid taking preCal from 9-12th.
Even if your kid does take a summer math course or double up in math at Deal, once they get to Cal in 10th, what courses are available to take past that? Most schools none. Walls and JR might offer Cal BC.
This is 2026. It is just absolute atrocity that a whole school district cannot provide an accelerated track for mathy kids and that reaching Cal by 12th is considered the “advanced” track.
Now the absence of your favorite math track is an “atrocity”?
You’re beyond help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Every high school that offers calc will allow a 10th grader to take it, if they have the prerequisites. And DCPS routinely allows outliers to take those prerequisites independently on an accelerated basis. You’re just mad that there’s no lockstep program that forces a large portion of the student body to accelerate to calc in 10th based on 6th grade math placement.
Please stop being obtuse. DCPS offers no track during the school year from middle school on for any student to successfully get to AP Cal by 10th - absolutely NONE.
So kids are forced to take geometry and Algebra 2 as summer courses to get there. Not ideal to cram a year of math in the summer and just sets up weak foundations. And who wants to spend their summers taking classes rather than having fun.
Now Deal is the only school offering to some kids to double up in Geometry and Algebra 2 in 8th. Also not ideal trying to juggle 2 math classes at once. In addition, the kids have to come to school EARLY to take the 2nd math class. Then they can take preCal in 9th at JR but it is not a true tracking class, because it’s any kid taking preCal from 9-12th.
Even if your kid does take a summer math course or double up in math at Deal, once they get to Cal in 10th, what courses are available to take past that? Most schools none. Walls and JR might offer Cal BC.
This is 2026. It is just absolute atrocity that a whole school district cannot provide an accelerated track for mathy kids and that reaching Cal by 12th is considered the “advanced” track.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Every high school that offers calc will allow a 10th grader to take it, if they have the prerequisites. And DCPS routinely allows outliers to take those prerequisites independently on an accelerated basis. You’re just mad that there’s no lockstep program that forces a large portion of the student body to accelerate to calc in 10th based on 6th grade math placement.
Please stop being obtuse. DCPS offers no track during the school year from middle school on for any student to successfully get to AP Cal by 10th - absolutely NONE.
So kids are forced to take geometry and Algebra 2 as summer courses to get there. Not ideal to cram a year of math in the summer and just sets up weak foundations. And who wants to spend their summers taking classes rather than having fun.
Now Deal is the only school offering to some kids to double up in Geometry and Algebra 2 in 8th. Also not ideal trying to juggle 2 math classes at once. In addition, the kids have to come to school EARLY to take the 2nd math class. Then they can take preCal in 9th at JR but it is not a true tracking class, because it’s any kid taking preCal from 9-12th.
Even if your kid does take a summer math course or double up in math at Deal, once they get to Cal in 10th, what courses are available to take past that? Most schools none. Walls and JR might offer Cal BC.
This is 2026. It is just absolute atrocity that a whole school district cannot provide an accelerated track for mathy kids and that reaching Cal by 12th is considered the “advanced” track.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Every high school that offers calc will allow a 10th grader to take it, if they have the prerequisites. And DCPS routinely allows outliers to take those prerequisites independently on an accelerated basis. You’re just mad that there’s no lockstep program that forces a large portion of the student body to accelerate to calc in 10th based on 6th grade math placement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Every high school that offers calc will allow a 10th grader to take it, if they have the prerequisites. And DCPS routinely allows outliers to take those prerequisites independently on an accelerated basis. You’re just mad that there’s no lockstep program that forces a large portion of the student body to accelerate to calc in 10th based on 6th grade math placement.
Taking Cal in 11th grade is just as common as taking it in 12th grade. Hopefully both sets have their reasons.
The outliers are the kids never taking it and, to a lesser extent, the kids taking it 10th grade or earlier. Both sets here absolutely have their reasons (they love math & are good at it, or they hate math & are bad at it).
All sets have to take 4 years of math. Most kids take progressive courseworks, Some left tail ones take applied math. Oh well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Every high school that offers calc will allow a 10th grader to take it, if they have the prerequisites. And DCPS routinely allows outliers to take those prerequisites independently on an accelerated basis. You’re just mad that there’s no lockstep program that forces a large portion of the student body to accelerate to calc in 10th based on 6th grade math placement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Every high school that offers calc will allow a 10th grader to take it, if they have the prerequisites. And DCPS routinely allows outliers to take those prerequisites independently on an accelerated basis. You’re just mad that there’s no lockstep program that forces a large portion of the student body to accelerate to calc in 10th based on 6th grade math placement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Correction the discussion was Cal in 12th was the floor. Cal should be offered in 11th grade and 10th grade and majority of schools offer neither.
Newsflash I don’t care about my kid getting into an Ivy or top 20. I went to a state school and am successful. College admissions is not the endpoint of high school.
I do care if he is bored to death in class and not learning and not being challenged because the school system DGAF about the high performers. This math discussion is just a small piece of the systemic problem in DCPS of low standards and low expectations.
Anonymous wrote:While I truly hate the defensive DCPS parent mentality that everything here is perfect, so sad and pathetic to see the clearly non-DCPS trolls fetishizing accelerated everything as if Calc in 11th grade as the floor.
News Flash: kids at a giant suburban high school with dozens of other accelerated classmates won't get into an Ivy or Top 20 maybe not UVA.
Keep telling yourself that accelerated math or winning spelling bees or graduating high school at age 15 is a hook. It's not. America doesn't prioritize test scores or accelerated math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Geometry by 8th is considered the lower track in math in Moco, Arlington, and Fairfax. Yet it is the highest math track offered at the strongest school in dcps. Pathetic.
Yikes
Anonymous wrote:Geometry by 8th is considered the lower track in math in Moco, Arlington, and Fairfax. Yet it is the highest math track offered at the strongest school in dcps. Pathetic.