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pehp

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Posts posted by pehp

  1. 14 minutes ago, 8filltheheart said:

    Where is he doing his work? Where are you while he is working?  I don't let my kids do their work in their bedrooms.  They work at the kitchen table.  I am either sitting at the table or working in the kitchen or walking in and out.  I grade their work as it is done.  I check in with them all of the time.  Youtube would be a no-go here.  Consequences for wasting school time exist in our home and always have.  It just isn't allowed.  Spotify is allowed.  Playlists are not created during school hrs.  Typically, only soundtracks like LoTR are allowed during school hrs.  

    FWIW, instilling good habits matters right now.  In 3 yrs he is going to be an independent adult.  I would definitely work on "self" training now.

    He works either at the dining table or our schoolroom table (basement). Very rare he’s in his room. During the day I’m either working (I work 1-2 hours a day) at my desk which is also in the schoolroom or doing various household tasks (laundry, tidying, cleaning, food prep, etc). I feel like I have to babysit his internet use, which no one enjoys. Nothing nefarious at all, but things like watching political debates and linguistics videos—with the occasional Babylon Bee clip thrown in. 

  2. 12 minutes ago, 8filltheheart said:

      I would work with him on learning how to plan daily schedules which include thinking forward to deadlines and breaking the deadlines into manageable daily steps.  IOW, don't just take away the production.  Replace the production with skills training and helping him feel successful and less stressed.  Then, when he gets involved in the next production, help him factor in the new time constraints and create daily schedules that are realistic and meet all goals.

    Yes-this was the idea of not letting him do the February show. Get off the hamster wheel/treadmill of scrambling and Busy for a couple of months to see if we can establish better habits. We’ve started already with a couple of basic morning routine things, but the distracted nature is one of those things that I’m struggling to determine how to help-tackle. 

  3. @8filltheheartYou’re right-the procrastination is not working for him. It makes him stressed and unhappy. 
     

    I see his primary struggles there as focus (sitting down to work but then getting wrapped up in YouTube videos or making Spotify playlists), & it’s hard for me to know how to improve the situation. I feel like I have to be on his back all the time, which neither of us enjoy. Since much of his work I involves the computer, I can’t just totally take it away. But I wish I could! (Even so, he’ll get distracted by his own thoughts, or drawing. Once I was flipping through his chemistry binder and found the answers to the questions all written out….in French. Which is super cool! But surely made the assignment take way longer. This kid!!!!) 
     

    Each week we write all his assignments in his planner, breaking them all down, assigning days to them and even times, but the workload almost always takes longer than the time estimates we give. Part of that is that there’s a fair amount of work. And part of that is that he struggles with attentiveness. The siren call of the laptop is so loud. So, so loud.

  4. Hello! I am looking for some group wisdom here & welcome your thoughts—

    My son is 16 and in 10th grade. This year he’s taking 3 classes through WHA to equal 4.5 credits (geometry, chemistry, and their combined literature/theology/history course). He’s also in French 4 and advanced conversational Spanish. In addition, he participates in a choir (once a week) & works 2 evenings a week at a local retirement home. He LOVES theatre and is in a community theatre production of A Christmas Carol, with multiple roles. 
     

    Last year he juggled a lot and made straight As, but it felt like a lot and he finished the year exhausted. This year he’s got mostly As with a couple B+s right now…but it *feels* like a struggle as he has developed a vicious cycle of procrastination, scrambling, panic-induced last-minute assignments, etc. Like spending two hours watching presidential primary debates when a geometry assignment is due…you know. Last year when he started with five outsourced classes, my dad was dying, so I just didn’t have the bandwidth to do a lot of habit training and life coaching. He’s surviving, but he’s not thriving, and neither of us are especially happy. 

    A few weeks back we decided that after the holidays he’d cut down to working one evening per week, and we indicated to him that in order to audition for the next show (in February), we’d need to see positive trajectory changes in terms of diligence. Nada! So auditions are this weekend and we’ve told him we don’t think he should audition because we’re not seeing the procrastination improve. He’s either procrastinating or working all the time, and forfeits exercise, fresh air, and hanging out. We are strategizing ways to help him with this issue of poor time management, but for now, it’s where we are…..

    He is understandably disappointed that he can’t audition for the  next show, even to the point of tears. I understand that he loves theatre and it’s a great outlet, and we’ve told him that he can audition for the following show (May, with rehearsals starting in March), but that we think we should dial back for the next few months and focus in on managing coursework.  “Theatre is my escape from school”—painful for me to hear from this lifelong auto-didactic who wants to spend his spare time reading all the sacred texts of all the world religions. In other words, I want him to be thriving and doing the things that bring joy, and formal school (& his challenges at managing it) are impediments…..

    What would you do? 

    -stick with the “cutting back” for a few months to focus on habit-building and related skills

    -let him do it, hope for the best 

    -drop a class to replace with one less homework-heavy/easier to manage 

    -some combo of the above

    -other (please specify 😅)

    This child is borderline brilliant, and his brain is not like mine. My EF skills are so good they’re on steroids. It’s hard for me to understand how he can deep-dive into a topic and learn all about it and process at a high level on metaphysical topics but he can’t, like, manage time. 

    Our goal is to help him flourish. We think cutting back is the next right thing in furtherance of that. But 🤷🏻‍♀️ it’s tough to know what to cut, when, and where. 

  5. On 11/26/2023 at 9:30 AM, MagistraKennedy said:

    This right here. 

    I went to a small private college in state --from the minute I drove into campus, I knew it was "the one". I looked at another small private college and didn't like the vibe (ironically, it's a college that I would LOVE my senior to consider, but she refuses, as it's 20 miles from our house!). I must have applied to the state flagship, because I distinctly remember looking at the housing application.  My husband's experience was similar. He had two small private colleges on his radar, and that's where he applied. 

     

    Same. I applied Early Decision to W&M, got accepted, that was that. My husband applied to FIVE schools which seemed like a lot back then. We just didn’t shop around, and my parents would have laughed me out of the house if I’d suggested anything that wasn’t in VA or an adjacent state! I wonder if it’s because things seem more competitive now, and that makes it all more complicated.

    IDK but I miss the simpler way. 

    • Like 3
  6. 25 minutes ago, ScoutTN said:

    @pehp Eric Reini is one of my Dd’s all-time favorite teachers. We got to meet him irl and have lunch on one of our college visits. Fun! 

    My son told me (he read this thread 😂) that everyone seems to love Reini! We’ve been lucky to meet 2 of my daughter’s teachers so far. If we get to LINK next year (ow, so expensive) maybe we’ll meet the others! We’ve overall had good experiences with teachers there so far. 

    • Like 2
  7. That’s a pretty fascinating article. 
     

    We’re not there yet, so I don’t know. But I agree that the sticker prices these days cause anxiety, and the entire process seems confusing and opaque. 
     

    I went to William and Mary (in state) and sticker price was $10k/year—all-inclusive. My parents paid about half that, maybe less—so about $15k-20k for all four years.
     

    Now it is about $40,000/year. 
     

    I’ve run NPCs all over the place and at W&M we’d basically pay full price, which is (& I loved that school), ludicrous to me. It’s all over the map. Generally the NPCs come back between $20-$35k as our expected contribution, but they’ve been as low as $8K and as high as $55k, depending on the school. 
     

    It just seemed a lot *simpler* when I was in school. 

    • Like 3
  8. On 11/19/2023 at 11:40 AM, ScoutTN said:

    Yes! ❤️ Eric Reini.

    Alg 2 was her easiest, lightest year at WHA. PreCal was a bear.

    Now this is interesting to know!! Alg 2 with Reini was light—this is good to hear. My son took Algebra 1/physics last year and this year it’s Geometry/chemistry and those combos just feel like a LOT because the sciences also involve math. He aced last year, but it just took so. much. time. 

    • Like 1
  9. 5 hours ago, Lawyer&Mom said:

    Basic intro business, economics and accounting courses are a good idea.  Lawyers get involved in business transactions but a lot of them don’t have much business background.  You don’t need to be a business expert but understanding the basic concepts will go a long way. 

    I took a cupcake/easy A class in law school called “Accounting for Lawyers” which was taught by a local accountant. It was one of the *most useful* classes I have ever taken! Especially if a student is a cerebral, never-exposed-to-reality, liberal-artsy type (that was me back then!), learning the basics of tax, accounting, and econ is just so helpful. 

    • Like 3
  10. On 9/13/2023 at 11:57 PM, prairiewindmomma said:

    You don’t necessarily need specific content to prep effectively for law school. You need skills. Your child needs to be able to read and summarize large amounts of text quickly and effectively. Most of the 1L first semester focuses on the IRAC method of writing briefs: pinpointing the issue, stating the rule, making an analysis, and drawing a conclusion. 
     

    I would aim for science, business, and math classes as well. Most patent attorneys are engineers. Many corporate or tax law attorneys have backgrounds in business classes. Spanish or Chinese are good second languages. 
     

    The logic questions on the LSAT were pretty easy. Any test prep book is going to get her there. If she can do the Mindbenders puzzles from Critical Thinking Company, she’s 90% prepared already.

    Seconded! 
     

    I also feel like economics would have been beneficial to me—not in getting into law school, but just in general understanding of How the World Works. 
     

    I took almost no science in college and ZERO math (just the way I like it). Majored in philosophy and had no problem getting into law school. A solid grasp on using language (philosophy and English classes) is useful. I think philosophy is particularly appealing because it is so logic-and-language based. 

    It is not about content, it’s about skills, and taking classes that demonstrate that she has honed those skills is probably the most beneficial route…..

    • Like 2
  11. On 11/4/2023 at 1:50 PM, jplain said:

    I have an opinion, but it's just that, an opinion.  Not a rule. 😊

    Personally I think two languages is enough to juggle until at least one (and ideally both) are at a solid pre-AP level.  In other words, if the student decided to take the corresponding AP world language classes next year, you know they'd rock them. The college equivalent would be placing easily into a 5th semester course.

    At that point, adding a third language is definitely doable, but that's not to say it'll be easy.  

    My senior started with Spanish, added French, and then added Russian.  (She also studies a bit of Kazakh and has briefly studied Norwegian and Portuguese.) Russian is her main focus right now, but she is attempting to maintain Spanish & French.  She has 2 tutoring sessions per week for Spanish (two different tutors) and one French tutoring session plus an Outschool advanced teen French conversation session.  She is easily maintaining the fluidity of her speech, but she is keenly aware that she is losing vocab.

    To stop the vocab attrition, she'd need to put in a lot more time with podcasts, audiobooks, TV shows, news, etc.  But the reality is that there aren't enough hours in the day.  In college she'll try to limit herself to a max of 2-3 languages, and that will likely mean putting one of her current languages on pause.

    On the topic of summer programs, my daughter recommends Université Sainte-Anne's summer French immersion program in Nova Scotia.  Note that they do teach French, not Québécois or Acadian French.  It is surprisingly affordable; the website lists prices in Canadian dollars.  I've posted about it here before, but I'm also happy to answer questions via private message.

    I agree with this! (Also am going to contact you about Nova Scotia—!)

    My son is in 10th grade. He’s in French 4 as well as advanced conversational Spanish (finished Spanish 3 and this is what was next through the place locally where he takes it). French is his first love. He has dabbled heavily in Mandarin, Russian, and other languages over the years and will likely be in a place next year to add another formal language *class* (he’ll be taking AP French and will likely just do more conversational Spanish to keep up skills/vocab—but it’s not his main focus).
     

    We were pretty intentional about limiting him to two formal language learning situations at first. I’m glad we did and now he’s at a level in French where he’s able to carry on conversations in French with native speakers, read books in French, watch films and understand it all…you know! It’s neat. So we think he’s got the bandwidth to add another language as a junior. I recommend focusing on 2 at once, but it might be hard to do three really formal classes at once, especially during the first couple years. 

    however—the autodidact approach can really work, so lots of that in another language on her own time can take her far.  Podcasts, films, books on tape, etc. My son did this when he was younger and placed into Honors French 2 without ever having actually taken French 1. 
     

    See if there’s an alliance francaise near you (my son would be horrified that I’m not inserting accents; whatever). We don’t have one here but there’s one an hour away and we’ve been once or twice. Charleston SC (our home-away-from-home) has a super active chapter! Lots of speaking practice there! 🙂

    • Thanks 1
  12. 1 hour ago, Porridge said:

    How about Derek Owens?

    This is a good recommendation; thank you. I checked the FAQs but didn’t see an answer to this question: roughly how long are the videos, are they daily, and roughly how long does each day’s lesson (problems/video/homework) take? I know there’s variation from student to student, but wondering generally. 
     

    ETA: this really looks like a great choice. I appreciate the simplicity of the syllabus—so straightforward! I feel like he would do well with this approach. The flexibility + structure We like live classes, but he’s got too many this year, so more flexibility would be good for him. 

    • Like 1
  13. I am on the hunt for a self-paced Algebra 2 course that will be suitable for a college-bound kid with strong math skills and no desire to pursue STEM in the future. 
     

    He made an A in Algebra 1 (WHA) and has an A or A- in Geometry (also WHA) right now. We like Wilson Hill a lot (we LOVE his teacher!), but the time commitment is heavier than we’d like, especially as it becomes apparent that he’s definitely not heading into science/math. Next year we plan to do heavy SAT prep & I would like to have an Algebra 2 program with a bit less homework, rigor, and time commitment than what we’ve had so far. 

    However, he works slowly. I am *positive* we have time management challenges and I’m suspicious about ADD (very easily distracted, but when he’s focused on something it’s an INTENSE laser like focus). So I’m torn about “caving” to a less rigorous approach if better time management skills would help (we are working on them, it’s hard, suggestions welcome) but it’s also clear that we want to invest time into other places. We are working on time audits and budgets now, and clearly he’s off the rails: in 6ish hours of “working” off and on during the last two days, he has barely finished the review problems for his test (granted there were many, and I think it’s overkill to do them all, but still).

    I’m also seeing that the structure of an online program is hard to manage. Get on the internet to check an assignment, resurface an hour later….we’ve all been there. He has a planner where we write assignments and I try to keep it all as “analog” as possible but I feel like there’s too much time in front of a laptop, which is not in and of itself a terrible thing (I work from home, I’m in front of one a lot!),  but it’s a struggle.

    Any Alg 2 recs or BTDT advice welcome! 

     

  14. This is my first year using it and I actually love LLATL!  My daughter is 5th grade and using the purple book--pretty sure that's "on-level" for her.  

    We skip the book studies b/c she has already read those and I don't beat dead horses.  The workbook format has been fabulous for me. It's SO easy to teach.  We don't do every single activity.  I find it to be supremely user-friendly, which I need at this point in my life! I am really, really happy with it.  It has been a nice way to bridge our lower elementary school years (in which language arts is very light, and limited to LOTS of reading, some handwriting, and some oral narration) and the middle school years, with a nice gentle approach to grammar for this girl who is probably not developmentally ready for the grammar her brother was tackling at the same age. I seriously considered using it for next year because I do like it so much and feel like it is a "just right" approach for language arts for this age, but life circumstances are moving me in the direction of Less of Me, and so I've signed her up for an online class instead, which I really hope will be a good choice.  However, if I weren't juggling living in two states and a father with a serious illness, I would definitely do LLATL next year again before transitioning into something else in 7th or 8th-ish grade.  But one of my own educational philosophies is Don't Burn 'Em Out, with Keep It Simple a close second, so a "lite" LA curriculum is probably up my alley! 😉 Everyone is different. 

    Anyhow! I've loved it! 

    • Like 1
  15. On 4/7/2022 at 6:40 PM, 8filltheheart said:

    You might want to look into the Croft Institute at Ole Miss.  About Us | The Croft Institute for International Studies | Ole Miss

    Ole Miss is now the home of 2 critical language flagship programs: Chinese and Arabic.

    Chinese Language Flagship Program - University of Mississippi (olemiss.edu)

    Arabic Language Flagship Program | The Language Flagship (olemiss.edu)

    Being able to attend a U on scholarship with a flagship program is a huge blessing.  It was what we had hoped to find for dd, but there weren't any for Russian.  It turned out OK bc she reached very high level language goals anyway.  But, flagship programs are definitely aligned for language mastery.  Not all UG programs have very high language goals.  (Intermediate level is often the target.)   It takes self-motivation to achieve higher levels in most programs.

    This is great--thank you for sharing.

    I am ignorant about language education, and would love to know--are flagship programs typically only for critical languages, or are there flagship programs across the US also for French?  He will almost certainly be fluent BY college, so he'll want a program with these higher language goals, if he does continue to pursue languages in college. And I'd be shocked if he didn't.  

    He's so intrigued by the CLS program that I showed him!!!!  Like, super enthusiastic!  "Urdu!" he exclaimed.

    Ha ha. 

    • Like 1
  16. On 4/7/2022 at 10:21 AM, jplain said:

    Unless he turns 15 soon, this one isn’t an option this year, but maybe in a year or two it’d be a good fit.  

    My 16 year old will be going to Université Sainte-Anne’s 5-week summer program in Nova Scotia.  The exchange rate makes it pretty affordable, certainly significantly less than a US residential summer program.  She’ll likely fly to Halifax and take the program-provided transportation to campus. 

    The French taught is “standard,” not québécois.  (There are of course Acadians in N.S., but Université Sainte-Anne is a Francophone university, and their immersion instructors are recruited from all over the French-speaking world.)

    https://www.usainteanne.ca/en/learn-french/spring-and-summer-sessions#apply

    Note that when applying as a US student, you use the online form for Canadian students and then choose US for citizenship.  This allows for credit card payment.  If you try to use the International form instead, payment becomes a lot more complicated.

    Here is a podcast episode focused on the Sainte-Anne immersion program: https://www.americathebilingual.com/41-french-immersion-at-universite-sainte-anne-a-bubble-of-joy/

     

    This sounds SO neat!  Also a great excuse to visit Nova Scotia....

    Please do come back here after your daughter attends the program. I know I'm not the only person who would love to hear about how it goes and what you think!  Thank you!

  17. 1 hour ago, 8filltheheart said:

    CLS is Critical Language Scholarship. https://clscholarship.org/about it is a competitive scholarship for IIRC 15 languages. I think they accept something like six hundred students total from around the country for all languages. I think the first year my daughter won there were 60 Russian students. She found out before covid and was so disappointed when it was virtual. 

    No, we are not South Carolina residents. She was one of 40 out-of-state students selected as a top scholar.

    This is incredible! It is right up my son’s alley. He’s most interested in Chinese and Arabic (also Thai but that’s not a critical language)…..hoping to get 2+ years of study of one of those under his belt before college. He’s also quite interested in international relations and diplomacy…..

  18. 1 hour ago, Terabith said:

    The one thing I'm annoyed about Roanoke College for is that "back in the day" they used to have a number of full ride and full tuition scholarships.  There was a big scholarship weekend with essays and interviews and what not, in addition to the scholarship application.  They've gotten rid of those things now.  

    That is a bummer. My sister didn’t get a full ride but she got LOTS of money. I’m sorry to hear that they’re offering fewer full scholarships. 

  19. 1 hour ago, 8filltheheart said:

    Since you travel to SC all of the time, I'd stop by USC.  That is where my dd attended and graduated with degrees in Russian and French.  She loved her time there.  (She was a Top Scholar and has so many opportunities.  She was selected for CLS (Russia) twice.  She was able to use her scholarship $$ for grad courses her sr yr.  (She is currently earning her MLIS and was part of their accelerated MLIS degree program.)  

    If he is interested in critical languages, there are Flagship programs (meaning accelerated language focus).  When she was a sr in high school, there were only 4 Russian Flagships and we couldn't afford any of them. (She attend SC on scholarship.)  She had been told she would never be able to achieve her language goals without attending one or spending significant time abroad.  She managed to reach advanced-mid with neither.  (CLS Russia was virtual both yrs for her thanks to covid.)  

    Oh thanks for this! My sweet dad is a gamecock (in fact my parents met in grad school at USC!) & would loooveeee this. 😉 

    What is CLS? That’s an acronym I don’t readily know, apparently. 
     

    This is definitely keeping me open to the larger public schools! Are you a SC resident?

  20. On 4/2/2022 at 10:37 AM, JanetC said:

    "Window shopping" general admissions tours to determine if a student likes the feel of different types of campuses are one thing, but I agree that you shouldn't do a visit with a professor until you're further down the path and have good questions. Repsect faculty time. On the other hand, feel free to ask your tour guide student anything! Some generic ones are
    "Why did you choose X-college?" "What's the best class you've ever taken here?"

    We are definitely looking generally! There's certainly no point in contacting professors at this juncture--in fact, I hadn't even thought about that.  Of course, I never went on ONE college tour EVER!

  21. On 4/2/2022 at 5:27 PM, Terabith said:

    Waving to you from Roanoke, VA.  We homeschooled when my kids were little, and for a brief stretch for my oldest in high school due to a mental health crisis, but my senior is at Community High School (which, if you decide you DO want to look at a brick and mortar, is a school that really excels with languages and the liberal arts and quirky) and my sophomore is at Patrick Henry High School.  

    I'll share with you places we have looked for my senior who is also liberal artsy and who will be going to Hollins in the fall.  In general, small private schools came in as less expensive than state schools for us.  

    Roanoke College has good merit aid.  I went there on a full ride about 25 years ago, and my oldest got decent merit aid from them.  They have a phenomenal international relations department.  

    Longwood and University of Mary Washington should go on your list as smaller state schools that offer more merit than the bigger state schools and are less cut throat than places like William and Mary, although the fees aspect of state schools make getting total price down hard even with the highest merit offerings.  Mary Washington also has the advantage of being able to take the Amtrack from Roanoke right to it.  

    College of Wooster is six hours away in Ohio, and it came in as the second best option for us financially.  I was very impressed by it.  

    Earlham in Indiana is also six hours away.  They gave us less merit money, but that's always a crap shoot.  I don't think my oldest is as competitive as your kid is likely to be, so you might have a better experience.  Earlham was actually my oldest's favorite school they looked at.  

    Check out Warren Wilson, in North Carolina.  Also maybe Maryville College in Tennessee.  It's maybe four or five hours away.  

    Some North Carolina schools like Appalachian State are pretty affordable.  Also University of Virginia - Wise campus is somewhere to look at.  My oldest is nonbinary, so we needed more LGBT friendly towns than those two, but they were on our radar as options.  

     

    Thanks!  We have an acquaintance at Community HS! It's such a neat place.... 🙂

    My sister is a Roanoke College grad and got excellent aid even though she had middling grades and a not-great-SAT score (of course this was in 2001).  I think my son would get in there with no problem, and of course, it's nice and close to home. It's definitely on the list of probable options. My mom went to Mary Washington back in the dark ages--and it's on my mental list, if not my physical one.  I didn't realize we can take the Amtrak to Fredericksburg from here!  That is a bonus.

    I will check out the other schools you mention.  We are also going to take a look sometime at Dickinson.  My BIL is in administration there and they apparently have a super study abroad program.  

    I'm super intrigued by W&M's new "St Andrews/William and Mary" degree (2 years in Williamsburg, 2 years in Scotland!), but so far, my son hasn't shown a ton of interest in W&M.  We'll see.  I loved it there!  It was very much the right fit for me, but he's a different creature.  (And much, much smarter than I am. ;))

    So many possibilities!

    • Like 1
  22. 13 hours ago, J-rap said:

    My dd is completely fluent in French and actually married a Frenchman last year during the pandemic in France!  (Where she is presently going to graduate school.)

    She had a pretty typical/traditional French language education experience growing up.  She graduated from high school a year early, and then attended a French-immersion Bible School in France the next year.  She had to pass a French language test to attend the school, but I think she was pretty borderline... They gave her the choice to attend if she was willing to work hard.  It was a very small school, but reputable and solid.  I can PM you the info if you're interested.  Before she went to the school, she spent the summer watching French TV shows and movies, listening to French radio stations, reading books in French (that she had already read in English), etc, to keep exposing herself to more French.

    Then the next year she went to college and was able to pass out of French grammar classes and move directly to the more challenging French lit, etc.  She also did a semester abroad where she studied in Dakar, Senegal.  She had the opportunity to take her classes in French or English, and she chose French, for the challenge.  After college, she taught English in French high schools for two years.  (Through a French Ministry of Education program.)

    She then decided to go to graduate school in France.  Graduate school programs in most European countries are taught in English, but in France, they're taught in French.  She had to take a French proficiency test and pass at the master level as part of the application, which she did.  

    Anyway, all that to say that she didn't do anything super extraordinary, but just kept plugging away at it, taking advantage of opportunities.  

     

     

    This is really interesting! I'm intrigued by the Bible school.....

    But Dakar!  That is so cool. My son is very interested in Senegal.  (He's interested in *everything,* but he was recently talking to me in particular about Senegal.)  

    He loves grammar (all grammar, all languages) and I've often told him he'd be a fabulous English teacher to French speakers! I love hearing about her path...thank you. 

    • Like 1
  23. 20 minutes ago, madteaparty said:

    I had a kid do one week of Arabic and one week of German. I think. I was not a huge fan. It’s hard to get to, and while it’s packaged as an opportunity for a traditional camp experience, this was not the case because it’s too freaking cold. The only time my DS was in the water was to pass the swim test lol.

    langauge wise, I was also a bit underwhelmed—but I am spoiled because my kids have had opportunities to go abroad for real immersion and to that this does not compare. So it could be me and the camp is fine. All I could think that entire drive from the airport to the camp was “I could have been in Paris by now”. But that’s usually my default meter lol. I will say if you are somewhat local, I could maybe see the point of this camp. 
    ETA that the merits of this program seems to mostly be that there is nothing comparable available in the US. 

    Okay--that cracked me up!!  We're a 20+ hour drive from there OR a solid half-day of flying plus a drive (from what I can tell), so yes, Paris doesn't seem so far...

     

    • Haha 1
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