Jump to content

Menu

Tattarrattat

Registered
  • Posts

    171
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Tattarrattat

  1. What about Johns Hopkins? I thought they moved from the SCAT to the SAT at about 6th grade, and especially given your DD's past test results, it makes complete sense to move to the SAT early!

     

    I'd be wary about registering through the College Board for such a young student because, as I understand it, registering directly includes the writing test, while talent search doesn't

     

    Based on our experience, College Board doesn't provide special arrangement for talent search kids in order for them to skip the writing section which is at the beginning of the test. If the testing site provides separate rooms for younger kids(if they have enough younger kids), then they put all the kids under 13 in those rooms. They don't differentiate them based on whether they register through CTY, TIP etc, or directly through CB. If you put CTY or maybe other talent search schools' codes as the recipients of the scores, Those schools will receive the scores even if you didn't register through them.

     

    The only difference I see is if you register through CB, you won't get school specific statistics from talent search schools, and you may miss out the ceremonies. But at least for CTY, you can always fax the scores afterwards (if you haven't already put CTY as the recipient of the scores) and pay the registration fee, and then be eligible for ceremonies.

     

    Also, CTY starts SAT/ACT in 7th grade. I read somewhere that Center for Bright Kids offers SAT to 6th graders.

     

    HTH

  2. Melissa, you may ask them to send you links to sample videos of similar courses currently offered in Spring. That might give you an idea of the course format and homework load (you get a glimpse of the webpage of the current week's homework at the end of the video)

     

    We're also interested in Witty Wordsmith. From what I've heard, Witty Wordsmith is relatively easier compared to their other regular classes, Alpha has heavier workload. This is not our first-hand experience, just what I've heard. I'd also be interested in hearing what others would say.

  3. In both cases, the grade reports (and they are detailed) for each semester come from ChemAdvantage. They say ChemAdvantage on them and are posted to the student online via Dropbox.

     

    If you take the course through PAH, then at the end of the year you will also receive a Pennsylvania Homeschoolers Transcript (with a raised seal) in the mail. It lists all the AP courses you have taken through PAH, with the name of the instructor and the final grade for each course. I don't know if ChemAdvantage sends a "transcript" in addition to the grade report at the end of the year.

     

    Thanks for the info. Musicmom! Really helpful!

  4. Is there a huge benefit to joining SET? Several people in various gifted e-lists I belong to have mentioned that the most they've got out of it is a newsletter or something like that? ETA: I've heard that SET will write a letter of recommendation to colleges so I can see one other benefit but how else does it help to belong to SET?

     

    The boy might try the ACT first because writing is not mandatory. He also likes that he will be tested on science topics in the ACT.

     

     

    Maybe there's no huge benefit to joining SET, other than Imagine magazine, cogito.com membership and maybe grand ceremony(all of which are nice but may or may not be very beneficial). My thinking is, if the kid is to try out talent search anyway, and doesn't mind either format (SAT is longer and has essay section, but he could choose to sit through it without writing something. ACT has science section, but it's probably more like scientific reading), I would probably go with SAT, with the add-on benefit of SET. Or maybe eventually take both if he's up to taking standard tests. Of course, if he prefers ACT format, then maybe go with what he likes first.

  5.  

    It will be a wonderful skill to have in high school when lab reports require typing equations. DD learned LaTex for this purpose. For a student going into STEM, LaTex will be extremely useful. It is so much better fro typing math (and thus also equations in chemistry and physics) than anything else I have seen.

     

     

     

    regentrude, Thank you for your insight! Really helpful!

  6. How do you use LaTex? Is there software that requires a download? How did your child learn it?

     

     

    As wapiti linked, AoPS has lots of information, tutorials and links to LaTeX. It's convenient to have basic knowledge of LaTeX if one takes AoPS classes, or post on their message boards. I'm not sure if it's worth it if you are using their books on your own.

     

    AoPS recommends some software to download(at the bottom of the page wapiti linked). I tried it myself a while ago, didn't feel it was very easy to use. DS actually doesn't use the software, he memorizes the markup coding he uses a lot (or refers to the reference page somewhere on their website if he doesn't remember) and just directly types them in the homework submission box, message box, and sometimes during class session. He mentioned even Word recognized it (I'm not sure how) when he types the code directly in the doc, instead of clicking through the buttons to find the right notation.

     

    Again, it's useful for AoPS classes. If typed solution is not required, I'm not sure if it's worth the effort typing it out instead of handwriting on paper. I guess it's up to the child.

  7. For my son it's worth it. His handwriting speed is decent, not super fast not slow either. But for AoPS courses, I felt handwritten solutions would add extra work load to the graders. That was why I let him submit typed solutions. (I think for the new format, everything has to be submitted online anyway.)

     

    He started typing math at a fairly young age (a bit younger than your son), but has improved quite a lot over time. Learning LaTex was definitely helpful. His overall typing speed is quite good as well, for a kid. Posting on message boards, occasionally using Typing Instructor and real-time typing race games helped too(He learned about the game from other AoPSers). He prefers typing to handwriting if possible, but there are still plenty of time that he needs to write on paper, and he's fine with that.

     

    HTH

  8. About erasing. For AoPS courses,they instructed the students to cross out (not erase)the section with mistakes, and rewrite that part of solution, that is, if they were submitting handwritten solutions. For DS, I typed what he wrote on the paper for him for his very first one or two assignments. After that, he managed to type his solutions directly in Word using built-in math symbols. Time consuming, but he got better gradually. He then learned more about LaTeX, so he was able to do it faster for later courses.

  9. So for those of you with years of experience, who would you recommend the AMC 10 for? I've read the guidance on the AMC website, but I'm not sure if I should recommend it to our group or not.

     

    I don't have years of experience :) .Last year (probably this year too), our local AMC proctor used 5% on AMC 8 as guideline to let kids from grade 8 and under participate in AMC 10 that they organized.

  10. I made blank bubble sheets here to print for practice.

     

    quark, There are past years' blank forms on AMC's website under Archive. For example:

     

    http://amc.maa.org/amc8/2010/AMC8-AnsForm.pdf

     

    As for your question, we haven't experienced anything similar. So hopefully someone else could share their experience. If it were me, I probably wouldn't feel comfortable going backward, since all questions carry the same weight. But again, We've never tried it that way. Does he have the same correct/answered ratio if he starts backward?

  11. Yes, he can take AMC10 or AMC12 regardless of whether he has done AMC8 before. They provide two testing dates. AMC 10A/12A are on the same date same time, and 10B/12B are on another. He can choose to take one test on either date, or he can choose to do 10A/10B, 10A/12B or 12A/10B on both dates. Note that he cannot take 10A/12A since they are on the same date and some problems overlap. Same for 10B/12B.

     

    HTH

  12. AoPS website mentioned Basics as "excellent preparation for the AMC 10" (see under their AMC10 Series course description) and the easier problems on AMC 12. Beyond is a good source for AMC 12.

     

     

    We have both books, and my impression is Bascis pulls different subjects from their introductory series, and Beyond goes with their intermediate series. They are like review and summary to prepare kids for AMC 10/12.

     

     

    I think Basics and Beyond were written before they published the subject-focused books.

     

     

    HTH.

  13. Thank you Kathy for sharing with us your own story, very inspiring. After reading your recommendations from a previous thread, we bought the Aha and Gotcha books (separate volumes) around Christmas and DS devoured them. Thank you!

    This career discussion is interesting. All the ideas are good to consider. DS has wanted to be a mathematician too since he was little(recent interests also included programming). So it's good to know about various options.

×
×
  • Create New...