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    #33952 01/02/09 09:44 PM
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    Hello everyone! I am just joining this board after hearing two of my good friends talk about it so much I just had to come over here and see what was going on (hi ladies!) and while I happened to have a topic I was thinking about this evening...

    I have a DS in early elementary school now, and I am worried about school options for him in the future (whether to accelerate, etc.). I was talking to my sister tonight and her DD tells her that she just learned about homeschooling and would my sister homeschool her for middle school, and then maybe send her back to school for high school in a few years? My sister said to me that high school would be so much easier for her DD (who is bored most of the day now in middle school) because so many high school kids end up going for half-days and graduating early because they have enough credits, etc. and that she could just get through it quickly and get on with her life.

    So the public high school town my sister lives in is not by any stretch sending >90% off to college (I don't know how many) but there are plenty who do go. So it led me to think...is high school really such a big deal now? I mean, high school as some of us knew it -- all the things that I wonder if my kid will miss out on if he is not there at the same age everyone else is if he is radically accelerated.

    I know sports can play into it, and obviously personality is a huge component, but is high school changing with all the AP/IB programs, college credit, early entry/running start programs, etc? Even in my sister's smallish town many kids are getting high school "over with" early to get on with college (or something else).

    My DS is years away from this, but it didn't occur to me until I heard her talking about it that maybe high school like it was 20-something years ago is not the same thing as it is today -- so is college (bachelors-level) just the new high school?

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    Hello, Lilac.

    I would guess the answer to your question depends on the high school.

    The first lesson I learned after my son became a (Davidson) YSer was the extensive variance of schooling options available to other YSers throughout the U.S. The educational quality, flexibility and offerings are often not equivalent from state to state or even similar demographical school districts within a state. Based on our particular area, I believe the �personality� of the district has as much to do with these differences as availability of funds.

    Some states offer stronger education overall as compared to other states. However, I would bet that in general, high income (high educational level) suburbs of large cities and college towns offer more rigor and challenge than most other areas.

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    Originally Posted by delbows
    However, I would bet that in general, high income (high educational level) suburbs of large cities and college towns offer more rigor and challenge than most other areas.
    But the higher income suburbs tend to offer less flexibility, because they are more invested in themselves as having 'all the answers.'

    This doesn't tend to apply (I think) to the very richest towns in the suburb (top 1%), but I sure have seen this at work in the next tier down (top 20%)

    It can take as little as one person in the right position to make a school work for an individual kid! High Schools tend to attain a certian size which helps our little ones be less 'rare,' and since high school aged kids are closer to adult, some of the adult-level abstraction skills that are a curse in elementary school start to become prized in High School.

    I think the key is to make the best decision you can every step of the way, and force yourself not to do more than 'peek' into the future. A child can subject accelerate into High School at late elementary or middle school age, attend community college, and then go back to High School at the regular time if they want to have the 'fabled' social experiences. I think that it is still true that lots of the learning in High School comes afterschool in the various clubs, but except for sports (and sometimes including sports) that can be experienced at many ages.

    Anyway, Welcome, SouthL, we're glad you are here! Feel free to ask any questions or brag away!

    Love and more Love,
    Grinity


    Coaching available, at SchoolSuccessSolutions.com

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