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RENEEinVA

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Posts posted by RENEEinVA

  1. The ball is rolling a little bit here. DD has started Common App. and essay, and letters of recommendation are forthcoming. I am almost done with the course descriptions. The homeschool profile and counselor letter are a lot more work, but I have a good idea of what I want to say for each one. One school has already asked for the syllabi for any outsourced classes, and fortunately (thanks to advice from WTM moms) we saved all of this information so it's just a matter of making copies. I feel we are in a good place right now, but I can see things slipping through the cracks if we are not careful. I will definitely use Kareni's spreadsheet idea...thank you!!

  2. Okay, I only read the first couple of posts but I think I can add a tiny bit to the discussion. My dd has been swimming competitvely for 8 years now. Believe it or not, this is the first year she actually had to get up at 4:30 AM, as all the other years had night practices. When her coach brought up the whole morning practice thing, she also thought it sounded fun. We decided to give it a try. Here is my pros/cons list.

     

    Pros -

    • gets it over with early in the day
    • pool is not as busy or noisy because fewer kids want morning swim
    • workouts are harder (only really dedicated swimmers attend)
    • no traffic to deal with

     

    Cons -

    • really hard to adjust to this schedule as a teenager
    • can barely keep her eyes open between 2-4 PM
    • sometimes can't get to bed early enough because of other activities/deadlines
    • getting up at 4:30 AM in February when it's really, really cold outside is not fun
    • sleeps in later on weekends which throws whole schedule off the following week

     

    These are just a few of the things that immediately pop into my mind. I think the biggest disadvantage is beginning this kind of schedule at 16 when your body is already used to the nighttime practices. It's really difficult.

     

    However, all that being said, I think swimming is a terrific sport for the body and mind. It requires hard work and discipline and all of that spills over into schoolwork.

     

    The jury is still out as to whether or not she will be swimming in the AM next year.

  3. My dd just finished both of those courses. Her AP Language exam was yesterday and she is so happy to be done. I pretty much agree with what everyone else has said. As long as your child is motivated, fairly organized, and independent then two AP classes is not a problem. I had no qualms about registering her for 3 APs next year (she chose Physics, Economics, and Calculus AB) based upon this year's performance.

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