Anonymous wrote:IB based on Humanities is a waster of time. STEM is the only direction worth heading in that is a guaranteed job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How well does the IB program serve students who are well-rounded but have a strong interest in science. Is the program strong in this area? We are zoned for Walter Johnson but our child is interested in the RM IB program. We are not sure whether she would be better off at RM. Any thoughts? She is an excellent student with a good work ethic so we do think she would do well in the IB program but wonder she should just go to WJ. Thanks.
I would never pull my kid into RM, IB or not and leave WJ. No way. The IB program might be rigorous but the student population overall is not impressive - hence why RM is the IB location (bump the scores up.)
Anonymous wrote:What report card does the magnet program look at?
do they look at 7th grade or 8th grade?
Also what if you have one c on your report card do you think they will accept you to the ib magnet program at RM
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How well does the IB program serve students who are well-rounded but have a strong interest in science. Is the program strong in this area? We are zoned for Walter Johnson but our child is interested in the RM IB program. We are not sure whether she would be better off at RM. Any thoughts? She is an excellent student with a good work ethic so we do think she would do well in the IB program but wonder she should just go to WJ. Thanks.
I would never pull my kid into RM, IB or not and leave WJ. No way. The IB program might be rigorous but the student population overall is not impressive - hence why RM is the IB location (bump the scores up.)
The IB was created as a carrot to Wootton parents when they moved Ritchie Park over to RM in the late 1980s/early 1990s.
No. All the magnet programs are I failing real estate neighborhoods and used to bring up the rank of the school so people will buy houses.
So it is a conspiracy between realtors and the school board? Oh, and maybe the mortgage lenders are in on it too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How well does the IB program serve students who are well-rounded but have a strong interest in science. Is the program strong in this area? We are zoned for Walter Johnson but our child is interested in the RM IB program. We are not sure whether she would be better off at RM. Any thoughts? She is an excellent student with a good work ethic so we do think she would do well in the IB program but wonder she should just go to WJ. Thanks.
I would never pull my kid into RM, IB or not and leave WJ. No way. The IB program might be rigorous but the student population overall is not impressive - hence why RM is the IB location (bump the scores up.)
The IB was created as a carrot to Wootton parents when they moved Ritchie Park over to RM in the late 1980s/early 1990s.
No. All the magnet programs are I failing real estate neighborhoods and used to bring up the rank of the school so people will buy houses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How well does the IB program serve students who are well-rounded but have a strong interest in science. Is the program strong in this area? We are zoned for Walter Johnson but our child is interested in the RM IB program. We are not sure whether she would be better off at RM. Any thoughts? She is an excellent student with a good work ethic so we do think she would do well in the IB program but wonder she should just go to WJ. Thanks.
I would never pull my kid into RM, IB or not and leave WJ. No way. The IB program might be rigorous but the student population overall is not impressive - hence why RM is the IB location (bump the scores up.)
The IB was created as a carrot to Wootton parents when they moved Ritchie Park over to RM in the late 1980s/early 1990s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How well does the IB program serve students who are well-rounded but have a strong interest in science. Is the program strong in this area? We are zoned for Walter Johnson but our child is interested in the RM IB program. We are not sure whether she would be better off at RM. Any thoughts? She is an excellent student with a good work ethic so we do think she would do well in the IB program but wonder she should just go to WJ. Thanks.
I would never pull my kid into RM, IB or not and leave WJ. No way. The IB program might be rigorous but the student population overall is not impressive - hence why RM is the IB location (bump the scores up.)
Anonymous wrote:IB based on Humanities is a waster of time. STEM is the only direction worth heading in that is a guaranteed job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just wondering ... do we really want our kids to grind through a program that makes an Ivy League college education look like a "cakewalk"?
Not discounting PP's accomplishments, but can't we make something challenging and enriching without making it such an ordeal? I want my kids to have time -- not for drinking and finding dope, LOL -- but for extracurriculars that are also enriching.
If you think some of the kids in IB programs aren't finding time for those activities too, you are kidding yourself. How do you think they relieve the stress they are under?
Anonymous wrote:I am just wondering ... do we really want our kids to grind through a program that makes an Ivy League college education look like a "cakewalk"?
Not discounting PP's accomplishments, but can't we make something challenging and enriching without making it such an ordeal? I want my kids to have time -- not for drinking and finding dope, LOL -- but for extracurriculars that are also enriching.
Anonymous wrote:I was in the first class at RM. What I can tell you from 25 years ago is that it prepared me in a way for college that I don't think AP could have done. I ended up at an Ivy and it was a cake walk compared to HS.
With AP, you pick and choose your courses. So you have English, History, Chemistry and they are discrete topics. In the IB program, it's much more cohesive so it brings everything together. In English, you learn about the subtleties of Shakespeare literature while in history you are studying the political events that are occurring and are causing Shakespeare to write the literature. In science, you are recreating the experiments that people are being ostracized for in your history class.
The most valuable skill the program taught me was time management and advocating for myself. Everyone in my class got pretty good about speaking up with history, english, and math all wanted to test on the same day. 25 years I'm sure they have a better system in place. The time management skills though prepared me for college and the actual work force. An assignment was given one day and it may not be referred to again until the due date.
25 years ago, we were segmented into a hallway pretty much isolated from the other kids. It was fine but I will say my high school experience socially was much different from DHs who was in a regular MCPS HS program. With the amount of work to be done, there just was no time for drinking, finding dope, skipping class, etc. DH and I often laugh that we both have a diploma that says Montgomery County High School on it. We had vastly different academic and social experiences.