Based on the discussion about the
Typical math progressions for high achievers, am I understanding correctly that it doesn't really pay to subject accelerate more than a year in sequence due to forgetting the middle school studies when it comes to college? (That is, unless the person is likely to graduate early and go to college, then it's just shifting the whole process ahead.)
One issue here is what math you need in college very much depends on what major you are interested in. Most schools start accelerating bright math kids at 5th/6th grades. Few kids this age have a solid idea of what they are going to be when they grow up or what major they might take and therefore what is useful. If your child ends up going on to a humanities course in college, the Calculus & or Stats they take in H.S. even if it's 9th grade can be the last math they never need to take.
It also depends on what "higher" math you have available to your student. I think its not necessary good for a student to take Calculus as a freshman (9th) or younger, if they aren't going to take higher math until they get to college 3+ years later. AP Stats, AP Computer Science isn't higher level. BUT there are other options to consider for these students including higher level math at university while still in H.S., going to college early, and some H.S. offer higher level math. What is crazy is if you are playing the get into one of the elite universities game, taking classes at a university don't help in the quest for top SAT's or top GPA's. Taking classes at a local university can hurt your GPA. The best way to play that game is take and get A's in as many AP classes as possible.
But it can work. I just suggest researching a PLAN for what you do if you go too far about the norm. (About 10% of DS's high school class take AP Calculus as a junior.) My husband finished H.S. math in junior high and went on to take math classes at university while in H.S., and went on to get a PhD in a math related field. Yes, it was to his advantage to accelerate that much.
As someone who didn't have Calculus offered at my HS, and didn't need it in college, I'm curious what happens in, say, Calculus (in grade 12, if available, or in college), if a child (of high ability, who needs fewer repetitions) simply went through a normal or one-year-ahead track, vs someone who had a broader/deeper compliment earlier.
Not sure I understand this question. The way it works in my district is the honors classes, ie the ones that are broader/deeper are taken by the most advanced, accelerated students. The students who take the sequence slower get a more cookie cutter program.
If a student wants to go into higher level math in university. It's more important IMO for the student to have depth. Understand WHY the procedures they are being taught work, be able to prove it and be able to see how to take a non-standard approach to a problem.
And why does the Common Core standard shift Algebra II to earlier a year -- just to give more opportunity for higher math in HS? It seems like if it's not relevant to many college/career paths, and if many kids aren't able to handle Algebra until they are older/more developmentally ready, that it's unnecessarily ambitious.
This is not my understanding. The "normal" Common Core plan is students take
Commom Core 8 - 8th grade..
Math1/Algebra I - 9th
Math2/Geometry = 10th
Math3/Algebra II -- 11th
This is actually LATER than it was 5 years ago. This is actually pushing things back by around 1/2 year.. 5-10 years ago California was pushing all students take Algebra in 8th grade. (Didn't really work) Common Core 8 has some topics from what used to be Algebra I & Geometry. And all of the above includes topics from Trig/Pre-calc.
Most average kids took either Algebra II in sophmore or junior year. And then a year of pre-calculus if they wanted to. Note my state only requires two years of H.S. math (must pass basic algebra) & most universities only require 3.