Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do not want to identify myself or my child by sharing school or district. It is in the DMV, further out in NoVA.
Small catholic to midsize middle (~600 kids)
My guess is LCPS, our district. Mostly great schools, depending on location. Stay away from Leesburg and Sterling, those are the worst ones. Western Loudoun and the Ashburn area have the best schools.
Teach her how to use the Schoology calendar, and keep up with her grades via ParentVue. Make sure she's in honors classes and Foundations for math. If really smart get her tested for Spectrum, has been a blessing to my DD.
LCPS retake policy is only for major summatives (big tests and projects), only if you get below an 80%, and can only be retaken up to an 80%. Very useful knowledge. Minor summatives (small quizzes and some assignments) cannot be retaken. Formatives (classwork and most homework) don't affect her grade, but they still show up in ParentVue.
Get her involved: my DD's school has many clubs, rec league sports teams, and the musical. This helps her find a group.
From watching DD, her friends, and the general population here would be my fashion essentials list:
Tops:
- Various cropped ribbed tank tops and shirts in solid colors
- A few hoodies and zipped jackets
- Quarter zips
- Graphic tees
- Athletic wear
- Music artist merch
Bottoms:
- Jean shorts
- Athletic skorts and shorts
- Black athletic leggings
- Black Flare pants
- Light gray joggers
- Pajama pants
Shoes:
- Air Forces
- Jordans
- Blazers
- Converse (especially platforms)
- Ugg Tamzin or similar
Accessories:
- Gold hoop earrings
- Kendra Scott necklaces
- Heshi bead or beach style bracelets
- Nike socks
- Stanley cups
Brands:
- Nike
- Hollister
- American Eagle
- Lululemon
- Aerie
- Brandy Melville
- Forever 21
- H&M
- Aeropostale
- Abercrombie
Hope this helps!
This is great!! Although I do not think I am going to buy crop tops, if I can avoid it.
PP has done a very nice job with what kids wear, generally speaking. Specifics might be slightly different between schools. As for crop tops, they don’t have to be as short as a sports bra. There are plenty that are barely cropped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do not want to identify myself or my child by sharing school or district. It is in the DMV, further out in NoVA.
Small catholic to midsize middle (~600 kids)
My guess is LCPS, our district. Mostly great schools, depending on location. Stay away from Leesburg and Sterling, those are the worst ones. Western Loudoun and the Ashburn area have the best schools.
Teach her how to use the Schoology calendar, and keep up with her grades via ParentVue. Make sure she's in honors classes and Foundations for math. If really smart get her tested for Spectrum, has been a blessing to my DD.
LCPS retake policy is only for major summatives (big tests and projects), only if you get below an 80%, and can only be retaken up to an 80%. Very useful knowledge. Minor summatives (small quizzes and some assignments) cannot be retaken. Formatives (classwork and most homework) don't affect her grade, but they still show up in ParentVue.
Get her involved: my DD's school has many clubs, rec league sports teams, and the musical. This helps her find a group.
From watching DD, her friends, and the general population here would be my fashion essentials list:
Tops:
- Various cropped ribbed tank tops and shirts in solid colors
- A few hoodies and zipped jackets
- Quarter zips
- Graphic tees
- Athletic wear
- Music artist merch
Bottoms:
- Jean shorts
- Athletic skorts and shorts
- Black athletic leggings
- Black Flare pants
- Light gray joggers
- Pajama pants
Shoes:
- Air Forces
- Jordans
- Blazers
- Converse (especially platforms)
- Ugg Tamzin or similar
Accessories:
- Gold hoop earrings
- Kendra Scott necklaces
- Heshi bead or beach style bracelets
- Nike socks
- Stanley cups
Brands:
- Nike
- Hollister
- American Eagle
- Lululemon
- Aerie
- Brandy Melville
- Forever 21
- H&M
- Aeropostale
- Abercrombie
Hope this helps!
This is great!! Although I do not think I am going to buy crop tops, if I can avoid it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do not want to identify myself or my child by sharing school or district. It is in the DMV, further out in NoVA.
Small catholic to midsize middle (~600 kids)
My guess is LCPS, our district. Mostly great schools, depending on location. Stay away from Leesburg and Sterling, those are the worst ones. Western Loudoun and the Ashburn area have the best schools.
Teach her how to use the Schoology calendar, and keep up with her grades via ParentVue. Make sure she's in honors classes and Foundations for math. If really smart get her tested for Spectrum, has been a blessing to my DD.
LCPS retake policy is only for major summatives (big tests and projects), only if you get below an 80%, and can only be retaken up to an 80%. Very useful knowledge. Minor summatives (small quizzes and some assignments) cannot be retaken. Formatives (classwork and most homework) don't affect her grade, but they still show up in ParentVue.
Get her involved: my DD's school has many clubs, rec league sports teams, and the musical. This helps her find a group.
From watching DD, her friends, and the general population here would be my fashion essentials list:
Tops:
- Various cropped ribbed tank tops and shirts in solid colors
- A few hoodies and zipped jackets
- Quarter zips
- Graphic tees
- Athletic wear
- Music artist merch
Bottoms:
- Jean shorts
- Athletic skorts and shorts
- Black athletic leggings
- Black Flare pants
- Light gray joggers
- Pajama pants
Shoes:
- Air Forces
- Jordans
- Blazers
- Converse (especially platforms)
- Ugg Tamzin or similar
Accessories:
- Gold hoop earrings
- Kendra Scott necklaces
- Heshi bead or beach style bracelets
- Nike socks
- Stanley cups
Brands:
- Nike
- Hollister
- American Eagle
- Lululemon
- Aerie
- Brandy Melville
- Forever 21
- H&M
- Aeropostale
- Abercrombie
Hope this helps!
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you would do private for k-5 then public for middle school. We did public K-5 then private middle school then back to public high school. Worked out great.
You really want to know about the kids your middle schooler is hanging out with and who their parents are. Easy to do in private but harder in public middle. Private middle schools do a much better job of no phones in class and are stricter in terms of behavior. You learn better study skills as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what is wrong with using the bathroom?
Some publics, especially large ones lock them due to drugs, sex, vaping, rapes, violence.
And if they don't, you run the risk of all of the above.
for middle school?!!!
sadly, yes
Yes absolutely 100 percent large public middle schools are locking the bathroom due to rapes.![]()
I haven’t heard of rapes..
But drugs (edibles), vaping, vandalism, bullying, is definitely happening in middle school bathrooms. Ours our locked, except during hall time and then emptied by security when the bell rings.
Wow.
And like usual, it's the girls who suffer from this.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I do not want to identify myself or my child by sharing school or district. It is in the DMV, further out in NoVA.
Small catholic to midsize middle (~600 kids)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No jeans allowed, only athletic wear. Probably only a clear backpack. Keep her eyes to herself, preferably on the floor. Learn how to hold it, so she doesn't have to use the restrooms.
What? My kid is at an MCPS middle school in Bethesda and they have a regular backpack, can wear jeans, and use the restroom - so I guess it depends!
Anonymous wrote:^^^ thanks!!
We have a math tutor now. I was thinking about asking for 6th gr curriculum (a pp suggested) to work w her over the summer.
If kids are behind in math or science, is it sink or swim? Or do they work with them to catch up?
Anonymous wrote:^^^^ thank you!! This is really helpful.
My dd is introverted, artsy & sporty. I am hoping she finds some likeminded kids in school and in our neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:^^^^ thank you!! This is really helpful.
My dd is introverted, artsy & sporty. I am hoping she finds some likeminded kids in school and in our neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly this is a useless thread without knowing the specific middle school and private school. We pulled my kid from a public middle school where DC had the highest GPA and was in the most advanced math course but was basically a year behind when DC got to private HS. And that’s not even talking about the serious safety issues such as the fights, the kids who OD’d on campus, the ambulances that showed up at school, and the kids who vaped in class.
So if I was advising OP, my advice would be to prepare much easier and very weak academics, vaping in class, serious problems with drug culture, and never using the bathroom because of the danger and filth there. But that’s if she’s going from a rigorous private to the specific public middle school my kid attended. She could be going from a hippie Waldorfy type private where she’s never had homework to one of the middle school that are supposedly academically rigorous. Or going from a small private that serves a primarily religious and poorer community to one of the wealthy public schools, where brand name is everything. Those are going to be a very different experiences.