vwsmith Posted February 24, 2022 Share Posted February 24, 2022 (edited) I can't seem to find the answer to this question on the website. I am considering enrolling my son (11th grade for the 2022-2023 school year) in the Early Modern Literature LIVE class. However, when I read the description for the self-paced option, it seems to indicate that the class is not discussion based. Am I, therefore, correct in believing that aside from receiving a grade, there is no other tangible difference between the LIVE and self-paced course? In addition, if there is no difference between the Live and Self-Paced course, then why would one take the Live class? Is tuition the same for the self-paced course? Edited February 24, 2022 by vwsmith Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ScoutTN Posted February 24, 2022 Share Posted February 24, 2022 The class is not primarily a discussion, but that does not mean there is no discussion. It is primarily a guided reading class. Ime, even if your student is not super-participatory, the live class is more fun. With a recording, your student has zero opportunity for participation. My student had always enjoyed the discussion. YMMV Fwiw, with kids who struggle to keep up or manage time, the reality of a LIVE class helps keep them on track. @cintinative 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cintinative Posted February 25, 2022 Share Posted February 25, 2022 I agree with @ScoutTN My oldest took the live medieval class last year. If he had taken it as a self-paced he would have missed the opportunity to ask (in class) questions about things he wasn't sure about and/or to chime in when the teacher asked questions. I am not clear on if the self-paced includes the grading of the midterm and final. I assume so? Since we started with HHL last year I have watched every class afterwards. So every Medieval class, every early modern class and every ancient lit class. I do think something is lost in not doing it live. However, if that is all you can do because of scheduling conflicts, they are still great classes. One of the complications of not doing it live is sometimes things are typed in the chat box by the teacher and you have to go back and find them in the chat scripts. Mr. Banks consistently posts those because he writes a lot in the chat box. I am not sure about Ms. Stanford. Ms. Stanford's classes are quite large--50 students or so. They are more like a lecture style class with some input from students at different points. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheAttachedMama Posted February 7, 2023 Share Posted February 7, 2023 For those of you who have taken the class, how did you calculate a grade at the end of the year? It doesn't seem like there is much work assigned. I am sure they are great classes, but how did you communicate that in your course description? 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cintinative Posted February 7, 2023 Share Posted February 7, 2023 @TheAttachedMamaThere is a midterm paper and a final paper which are graded by the teacher. I base their grade on that. In the course description I said the grade was based on participation and completion of the midterm and final. I don't want you to take this the wrong way, but I consider this one of our "easy" classes. We have enough other classes that demonstrate rigor that I don't worry about this one. @ScoutTN I would love to see your course description for this. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ScoutTN Posted February 8, 2023 Share Posted February 8, 2023 (edited) 14 hours ago, cintinative said: @TheAttachedMamaThere is a midterm paper and a final paper which are graded by the teacher. I base their grade on that. In the course description I said the grade was based on participation and completion of the midterm and final. I don't want you to take this the wrong way, but I consider this one of our "easy" classes. We have enough other classes that demonstrate rigor that I don't worry about this one. @ScoutTN I would love to see your course description for this. Our transcript is from our umbrella school. I don’t have a formal course description document. Dd had been accepted to five universities and has received substantial merit aid and been invited to compete for other scholarships/honors college slots without one. No one ever asked for it. Angelina’s classes are very light on output, but not light on thinking. Edited February 8, 2023 by ScoutTN 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheAttachedMama Posted February 8, 2023 Share Posted February 8, 2023 22 hours ago, cintinative said: @TheAttachedMamaThere is a midterm paper and a final paper which are graded by the teacher. I base their grade on that. In the course description I said the grade was based on participation and completion of the midterm and final. I don't want you to take this the wrong way, but I consider this one of our "easy" classes. We have enough other classes that demonstrate rigor that I don't worry about this one. @ScoutTN I would love to see your course description for this. I totally understand that! I think it is actually very healthy to "go tough" in some areas and to "go lighter" in others. We do that too in our schedules. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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