Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was one of seven kids and we definitely were not over scheduled as my parents were just trying to survive. Whatever you wanted to do you really did on your own. All seven of us have done extremely well so it worked for us.
What applies to millennials and gen Xers doesn’t apply to Gen Z and Alpha.
They are in a completely different world than what we grew up in.
Anonymous wrote:Most Gen X was not over scheduled because they were the latchkey kids. How did they turn out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was one of seven kids and we definitely were not over scheduled as my parents were just trying to survive. Whatever you wanted to do you really did on your own. All seven of us have done extremely well so it worked for us.
What applies to millennials and gen Xers doesn’t apply to Gen Z and Alpha.
They are in a completely different world than what we grew up in.
DP but absolutely not. It’s a totally different world with screens and social media.
That's just an excuse ppl give. Things aren't that different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was one of seven kids and we definitely were not over scheduled as my parents were just trying to survive. Whatever you wanted to do you really did on your own. All seven of us have done extremely well so it worked for us.
What applies to millennials and gen Xers doesn’t apply to Gen Z and Alpha.
They are in a completely different world than what we grew up in.
Anonymous wrote:I was one of seven kids and we definitely were not over scheduled as my parents were just trying to survive. Whatever you wanted to do you really did on your own. All seven of us have done extremely well so it worked for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My three children are now in their mid to late 30s and they are doing very well! We never over scheduled them and we just let them do what they wanted to do which was not crazy. None of them were crazy about sports though they did participate. We encouraged it but didn’t drive it. They definitely pursued their own interests which we supported. We did encourage them to be good students and they were.
Wow you are old
Anonymous wrote:You can be well scheduled and not exhausted. It just depends on how intelligent and gifted the child is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does less scheduled also mean you don't supplement much at home? I'm not very happy with our public school, and I'm thinking of adding some work at home. Nothing major, just a page of math and spelling a few times a week, maybe 20 minutes a day. Basically things I think he should be learning at school. Is everyone already doing this, and I just don't know...?
I did spelling, handwriting, and got them books from the library that just happened to supplement science and history but were also fun to read. Math was fine (for my kids) once they were in advanced math starting in 3rd. Now we're in private and I don't have to do any of that except the books - because I like doing that more than because I have to - because the school is doing it.
In my circles it was probably 1/3rd of people who supplement. At least one private school parent and the rest public.
Do you mind sharing the titles of what you used?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does less scheduled also mean you don't supplement much at home? I'm not very happy with our public school, and I'm thinking of adding some work at home. Nothing major, just a page of math and spelling a few times a week, maybe 20 minutes a day. Basically things I think he should be learning at school. Is everyone already doing this, and I just don't know...?
I did spelling, handwriting, and got them books from the library that just happened to supplement science and history but were also fun to read. Math was fine (for my kids) once they were in advanced math starting in 3rd. Now we're in private and I don't have to do any of that except the books - because I like doing that more than because I have to - because the school is doing it.
In my circles it was probably 1/3rd of people who supplement. At least one private school parent and the rest public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pp again. I do think you can get away with no studying in middle school but not high school AP classes.
I agree. The poster that mentioned all the APs with no work is not being truthful. They are a troll.
Or their kid is such a quick worker they get everything done in study hall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does less scheduled also mean you don't supplement much at home? I'm not very happy with our public school, and I'm thinking of adding some work at home. Nothing major, just a page of math and spelling a few times a week, maybe 20 minutes a day. Basically things I think he should be learning at school. Is everyone already doing this, and I just don't know...?
I did spelling, handwriting, and got them books from the library that just happened to supplement science and history but were also fun to read. Math was fine (for my kids) once they were in advanced math starting in 3rd. Now we're in private and I don't have to do any of that except the books - because I like doing that more than because I have to - because the school is doing it.
In my circles it was probably 1/3rd of people who supplement. At least one private school parent and the rest public.