Anonymous wrote:OP, Some of these posters are jealous nuts.
Of course you already know dropping down to Alg. 2. Honors would be a waste of time for a kid who already got an A in MCPS and I'm not sure your school would allow it anyway. Unless you came from a different district, your child almost definitely took the class at a high school, maybe the same high school, so the content and even possibly the teacher is going to be the same.
DCUM loves to take down kids who do better than theirs so it's no surprise they are trying to give bad advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
To each their own but I've had one kid go through MCPS and another still in HS. You are potentially setting your kid up for issues down the road. I don't generally help my kids in HS because I want them to be on a track that is appropriate for their strengths and not in ending up in college struggling.
As for acceleration, IMO schools are allowing too many kids these tracks now without advising parents of further downstream problems. Taking Pre-Calc in 9th grade should be exceedingly rare. Also, more than half the grade should not be on a track to take Calc in 11th grade. It's nice what they do at Blair and Poolesville where they adjust the kids math tracks based on testing once they arrive in 9th grade.
No one is asking your opinion. Blair and Poolesville only let in 100 kids each so what do the rest of the smart kids do? And, if they were already on this track they wouldn't make a child repeat a class. Maybe your ego is an issue. You can always slow down later on in Calc. Not a big deal.
Actually at Blair and Poolesville they put the kid that already took Alg2 and the ones that did not but test high in the same class. Well aware of the space issues and it's a shame this kind of setup is not offered elsewhere.
There is actually no slow down other than going to Calc AB which then what was the point of getting so far ahead? IMO better for kids to get a solid math foundation early. Just offering an opinion as someone in STEM myself and an MCPS parent. Chill out.
There is slowing down. Many DCUM parents are in STEM so saying you are in STEM means nothing. The point of going to Calc AB is to meet their needs but if they were ready and doing well in Algebra in 6th or 7th, why would you stop it? The issue is how Algebra and Geometry are being taught and not all teachers are strong teachers, especially in higher level math. It's very hard to learn without textbooks or adequate practice with homework and classwork as well as teachers reviewing assignments. We used the free tutoring the past few years. If it was free, why wouldn't you. I really wish they'd bring it back for kids like OP who need a bit more support.
Personally I don't care about Blair or Poolesville as we couldn't make it work with our after school schedule and we didn't like the curriculum as it didn't have the right focus for our child. I don't get the big deal about going to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
To each their own but I've had one kid go through MCPS and another still in HS. You are potentially setting your kid up for issues down the road. I don't generally help my kids in HS because I want them to be on a track that is appropriate for their strengths and not in ending up in college struggling.
As for acceleration, IMO schools are allowing too many kids these tracks now without advising parents of further downstream problems. Taking Pre-Calc in 9th grade should be exceedingly rare. Also, more than half the grade should not be on a track to take Calc in 11th grade. It's nice what they do at Blair and Poolesville where they adjust the kids math tracks based on testing once they arrive in 9th grade.
No one is asking your opinion. Blair and Poolesville only let in 100 kids each so what do the rest of the smart kids do? And, if they were already on this track they wouldn't make a child repeat a class. Maybe your ego is an issue. You can always slow down later on in Calc. Not a big deal.
Actually at Blair and Poolesville they put the kid that already took Alg2 and the ones that did not but test high in the same class. Well aware of the space issues and it's a shame this kind of setup is not offered elsewhere.
There is actually no slow down other than going to Calc AB which then what was the point of getting so far ahead? IMO better for kids to get a solid math foundation early. Just offering an opinion as someone in STEM myself and an MCPS parent. Chill out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
How do you know?
It's ridiculous assume that someone getting a D in September can handle it and just needs a bit more support.
Why not try giving the child more support vs. holding them back. Holding them back isn't going to help, even if they wait a year, they will still need support. Precal is a huge leap.
Algebra 2 to precalculus is not a huge leap. Literally hundreds of thousands transition successfully every year.
There’s support and there’s pushing him through when he’s not ready with the risk of backfiring. Don’t let your ego decide what class your child should take. Think only of what’s best for him in the long run.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
To each their own but I've had one kid go through MCPS and another still in HS. You are potentially setting your kid up for issues down the road. I don't generally help my kids in HS because I want them to be on a track that is appropriate for their strengths and not in ending up in college struggling.
As for acceleration, IMO schools are allowing too many kids these tracks now without advising parents of further downstream problems. Taking Pre-Calc in 9th grade should be exceedingly rare. Also, more than half the grade should not be on a track to take Calc in 11th grade. It's nice what they do at Blair and Poolesville where they adjust the kids math tracks based on testing once they arrive in 9th grade.
No one is asking your opinion. Blair and Poolesville only let in 100 kids each so what do the rest of the smart kids do? And, if they were already on this track they wouldn't make a child repeat a class. Maybe your ego is an issue. You can always slow down later on in Calc. Not a big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
How do you know?
It's ridiculous assume that someone getting a D in September can handle it and just needs a bit more support.
Why not try giving the child more support vs. holding them back. Holding them back isn't going to help, even if they wait a year, they will still need support. Precal is a huge leap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
To each their own but I've had one kid go through MCPS and another still in HS. You are potentially setting your kid up for issues down the road. I don't generally help my kids in HS because I want them to be on a track that is appropriate for their strengths and not in ending up in college struggling.
As for acceleration, IMO schools are allowing too many kids these tracks now without advising parents of further downstream problems. Taking Pre-Calc in 9th grade should be exceedingly rare. Also, more than half the grade should not be on a track to take Calc in 11th grade. It's nice what they do at Blair and Poolesville where they adjust the kids math tracks based on testing once they arrive in 9th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
How do you know?
It's ridiculous assume that someone getting a D in September can handle it and just needs a bit more support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many students go from an A in Alg. 2 to doing poorly in Pre-cal and also in the transition from Geometry to Alg. 2.
Your child sounds like he's talented in math probably used to being able to do all the work until now without working too hard. I was just speaking with a colleague who has a Ph.D. in MATH and he was telling me how hard it was for him in high school when he moved to Alg. 2/Precal for this reason. He's a young guy, probably in his 30s. Everything had been easy so he did not learn how to work his way through more complex problems. He got bad grades that year but he became a stronger math student by working through it. He's now in a job where he uses math every day.
Side note to OP: I think he's great your son already knows he wanst to be a physicist!
Advice from someone with a PhD in Physics (MIT), not someone who knows someone with a PhD in math.
For a career in Physics you need a strong math foundation, no way around it.
OP needs to figure out why the D is happening, and if her son can turn it around. I get that repeating Algebra 2 is going through the same material, but if he didn’t master it despite an A, what’s the alternative? The kid needs to take a diagnostic test, try Khan Academy full course test, not just browsing through a few questions, he should do at least 90% without breaking a sweat. He could also try the AOPS, ‘Do you need it?’, and ‘Are you ready’ tests, again, he should show mastery. If he doesn't, he’ll need to catch up while not being able to afford a B.
The parent can hire a tutor for precalculus, but given how advanced the student is, she’ll need to find tutors for Calculus BC, Multivariable, Differential Equations and Linear algebra. Not ideal, the kid needs to buckle down and figure it out in his own or look into another major he can handle independently.
Given his intended major, he will also take AP Physics C, two of the hardest AP classes, the difficulty will only go up from here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP back. He is in 9th. 8th grade MapM was 282. I am honestly in a new territory here because I have never had to worry about anything school related. We have always been very hands off with school with all of our kids. Older sibling took regular precalculus in 10th but in a different district. Never had any tutors for math or any of the AP courses. Older sibling is in an engineering program at UMD. This DS, middle child, also wants to be a physicist. He is worried that moving down to regular precalculus will be counted against him during college admissions. He wanted to take Calculus AB in 10th, BC in 11th and AP stats in 12th. He took Algebra 1 in 6th during COVID years but did AoPS Algebra 1 concurrently, so if he has gaps they have to be from Algebra 2. I will try to persuade him to take regular precalculus.
NP here. Honors Precalculus is where students first start to encounter a lot of abstract thinking in math. Also, ages 12-15 is a big shift in adolescent brain development where they shift from very concrete, literal thinking to more abstract reasoning. Your son may simply have outpaced his brain’s development. Assure him that a slowdown right now doesn’t mean he can’t still be on the long term path he’s aiming for.
My suggestion is to take regular Precalc right now, and then Honors Precalc in the summer. And then continue with AB Calculus next fall.
What abstract thinking is in Precalculus but not Algebra or Geometry?
Here’s a good description of the thinking in HPrecalc
https://saratogafalcon.org/content/precalculus-honors-classes-should-not-transform-curriculum-to-conform-to-ap-precalculus/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP this is spot on. Why it’s such a shame that parents push their kids on this super advanced track without thinking ahead. Unfortunately many parents overestimate their kid, maybe because they don’t understand how there are kids out there that can truly handle this work, sometimes with no teaching and certainly no help.
My kid choose this track. We didn't push and tried to discourage it. They just need a bit of support from a parent or tutor. What is the big deal? Just because you will not help your kids in any way but clearly have the time, doesn't mean the rest of us shouldn't. This kid can handle it. They just need a bit more support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many students go from an A in Alg. 2 to doing poorly in Pre-cal and also in the transition from Geometry to Alg. 2.
Your child sounds like he's talented in math probably used to being able to do all the work until now without working too hard. I was just speaking with a colleague who has a Ph.D. in MATH and he was telling me how hard it was for him in high school when he moved to Alg. 2/Precal for this reason. He's a young guy, probably in his 30s. Everything had been easy so he did not learn how to work his way through more complex problems. He got bad grades that year but he became a stronger math student by working through it. He's now in a job where he uses math every day.
Side note to OP: I think he's great your son already knows he wanst to be a physicist!
Advice from someone with a PhD in Physics (MIT), not someone who knows someone with a PhD in math.
For a career in Physics you need a strong math foundation, no way around it.
OP needs to figure out why the D is happening, and if her son can turn it around. I get that repeating Algebra 2 is going through the same material, but if he didn’t master it despite an A, what’s the alternative? The kid needs to take a diagnostic test, try Khan Academy full course test, not just browsing through a few questions, he should do at least 90% without breaking a sweat. He could also try the AOPS, ‘Do you need it?’, and ‘Are you ready’ tests, again, he should show mastery. If he doesn't, he’ll need to catch up while not being able to afford a B.
The parent can hire a tutor for precalculus, but given how advanced the student is, she’ll need to find tutors for Calculus BC, Multivariable, Differential Equations and Linear algebra. Not ideal, the kid needs to buckle down and figure it out in his own or look into another major he can handle independently.
Given his intended major, he will also take AP Physics C, two of the hardest AP classes, the difficulty will only go up from here.