Kids - School Grades

Didn't we all do that at some point? Mine was almost always self inflicted as my procrastination hand is strong.

But I don't really see any benefit to the student. Having a schedule that busy doesn't leave room for just growing as a person and enjoying ******* life.

Do we remember more about the class work or the time learning outside of class?

In high school? No, I'm fairly certain I never did.
 
It depends. I've worked hard to let ours now that mistakes are OK. We've found that we all make them, sometimes the computer glitches and one gets missed, and it's all right.

I figure if she's doing her best, I'm fine with it. If not, I'm not. But her doing her best is pretty incredible, so the grades just follow along with that. Sometimes her languages drop a little (like into the 80s), but that's just a normal thing. I really can't complain about those scores.

So it's pretty much both here, with a focus on accepting mistakes, sometimes learning from them, sometimes just accepting that it's fine.
Leading by example. Well done. ;)

I do think for kids there is a ton of pressure on grades, getting into the best schools and programs that it is too much, and less than a great outcome can really weigh on kids.

Tried to get my oldest to scale back on APs and stuff. She had a brutal semester last year spending a good 3-4 hours on homework each night. In my opinion that's too much. You still need to be a kid. Since then she's scaled back on those accepted some A- and B+ now and then and is enjoying school and activities. Has some ADHD but has become very skilled at managing it.
 
Leading by example. Well done. ;)

I do think for kids there is a ton of pressure on grades, getting into the best schools and programs that it is too much, and less than a great outcome can really weigh on kids.

Tried to get my oldest to scale back on APs and stuff. She had a brutal semester last year spending a good 3-4 hours on homework each night. In my opinion that's too much. You still need to be a kid. Since then she's scaled back on those accepted some A- and B+ now and then and is enjoying school and activities. Has some ADHD but has become very skilled at managing it.

I think my kids don't have aspirations of getting into the best schools and stuff. They both just kind of want to go ISU or Iowa and have a good life. And you should be challenging yourself but not burning yourself out. It's a hard balance to strike which is why you just need to talk to them about it.

My kids do a ton of activities. I mean a ton. To the point where I want them to do less stuff but they keep wanting more. So the she is on the other foot for me. I just wanted to sit and home and play Zelda and Madden so I just can't be too picky about anything.
 
There have been a lot of studies that public schools are designed for the way girls learn. Boys get bored and want to be challenged more. In our high school, the National Honor Society was almost all girls.
Who are always the AEA people and education professors in college, women. They teach how they would learn. Boys and girls minds do vary.

The new math makes less sense to boys than the old way, but girls seem to pick up on it quicker. Just an example.
 
Last edited:
I have never had a job interview where they asked what my gpa was in college.

I've only had two jobs, but both had a GPA requirement. But one was a government contractor and one was government.
 
I’ll likely expect A’s. But I’m not going to freak over B’s if the effort is there.

I agree with some on here that school in general is a joke, but the work habits & kindness to others are more important to learn right now.

I actually had a stern discussion with my now 4th grader last year about his effort in math. Brought home lots of mistakes on his worksheets. I just asked if he was really, REALLY trying his best. He admitted he probably wasn’t. I asked him to try for one week and we’d get ice cream. I don’t think he missed more than one math question per week for the rest of the year.

I’ll only expect A’s because I’m almost certain my kids should be able to handle it for most classes. Especially through high school, good grades should be achievable if important soft skills like effort & organization are practiced.
 
  • Like
Reactions: NWICY
When I was hired at Iowa State many years ago, there were 63 applicants for my position. I wanted the job so badly, but I figured my chances were pretty remote. Needless to say, I was ecstatic when they offered me the position.

They told me the reason I was selected was the way I answered the final interview question in front of a very large search committee.

At the end of a half day long interview, they said they had one final question which they acknowledged wasn't very fair since I didn't know who the other finalists were. They asked if I could explain why I should be selected over those other finalists. After pausing a few seconds, I got pretty serious and said I don't know anything about the other finalists, but I know one thing with absolute certainty - none of them will be as appreciative or work as hard as I will.

Over the many years since then, I've had the opportunity to hire a lot of people at Iowa State. The two things I have always focused on when selecting a candidate are work ethic and soft skills. Technical skills were always secondary to me. You can teach technical skills, but after you become an adult, it's pretty difficult to teach soft skills or work ethic.

I paid attention to the candidate's college GPA as it can be reflective of their work ethic, but it wasn't of great importance to me compared to their work ethic or soft skills.

 
I’ll likely expect A’s. But I’m not going to freak over B’s if the effort is there.

I agree with some on here that school in general is a joke, but the work habits & kindness to others are more important to learn right now.

I actually had a stern discussion with my now 4th grader last year about his effort in math. Brought home lots of mistakes on his worksheets. I just asked if he was really, REALLY trying his best. He admitted he probably wasn’t. I asked him to try for one week and we’d get ice cream. I don’t think he missed more than one math question per week for the rest of the year.

I’ll only expect A’s because I’m almost certain my kids should be able to handle it for most classes. Especially through high school, good grades should be achievable if important soft skills like effort & organization are practiced.
I’ve got to push back a big on this “school in general is a joke” you get out of education exactly what you put in. If you’re just going to school with no goal in mind then it gets rough but all education can provide value.

Also gotta give you props on the reward system. No idea what children’s psychologists would say but I’ve always had the reward system work from a personal and word of mouth perspective.
 
Our oldest is in 7th grade this year, the first year they actually assign letter grades. Before, it was just the fall, winter, spring standardized testing results.

How do you/did you approach balancing a push for good grades with just doing their best? What were suitable grades for your kids?

Our kids are incredibly intelligent but struggle with ADHD, Anxiety, Depression so there's a bit of a balance act we have to figure out and just realized as the first grades came in that we hadn't figured that out yet.
#1 get to really know the teachers. They will have a great perspective on whether your kid is picking up the subjects or not.
#2 if they need assistance then look within the school (paras) or outside (mathnasium)
#3 if they have the aptitude but are lazy, then you need to find motivations (carrots versus whips)
#4 it can help to progressively dig deeper into a discussion around goal setting (e.g., if you want to be a veterinarian, then you need to get into X. To get into school X, you need to take these classes and have Y GPA). They should be able to pick some of that up in 7th grade, but the big conversation needs to happen when they register for 9th grade classes.
#5 You will likely take their grades more personal than they will. You won't be the only parent going through that. It can be a struggle when you can see the potential that they aren't living up to; the best you can do is to help them understand that decisions have consequences.

Good Luck!
 
I’ve got to push back a big on this “school in general is a joke” you get out of education exactly what you put in. If you’re just going to school with no goal in mind then it gets rough but all education can provide value.

Also gotta give you props on the reward system. No idea what children’s psychologists would say but I’ve always had the reward system work from a personal and word of mouth perspective.

The “joke” to me is the amount of wasted time. Schoolwork, for most kids, can be completed in less than half the time kids are actually in school, and working ahead is not encouraged.
 
The “joke” to me is the amount of wasted time. Schoolwork, for most kids, can be completed in less than half the time kids are actually in school, and working ahead is not encouraged.
No idea where you are getting that idea but that’s what AP classes are for. If they are doing AP classes in half the time with a 4.0 have them test out and take college courses through a local cc.

I do agree there is wasted time but that’s more for the classes taught than actual learning.

Also talk to the teacher about working ahead, if they are getting a 4.0 and not disrupting the class it shouldn’t be an issue. I did all my work in other classes but can accept it if time has changed.
 
Just talk amongst parents who have both boys and girls and how the boys struggle early and through algebra one but then overtake the girls in math after that. So it is a small sample size and non scientific.
I don’t know about the math specific part but there are studies about gender bias favoring girls in K-12
 
  • Like
Reactions: BCClone
The “joke” to me is the amount of wasted time. Schoolwork, for most kids, can be completed in less than half the time kids are actually in school, and working ahead is not encouraged.
Education is not based on individual ability and generally is set for the people in the 35-50% range early on. Special needs students are now left in class with an aid instead of being separated to be one on one somewhere else. They largely become a distraction for the other students but the state requires them to be integrated.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: FriendlySpartan
I don’t know about the math specific part but there are studies about gender bias favoring girls in K-12
Ever went to parent teacher conferences? I’ve talked to other dads and we generally get ignored in them until the end when they ask any questions and then look at the dad. My info is the primary contact info but they always email my wife about everything.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: FriendlySpartan
I’ve got to push back a big on this “school in general is a joke” you get out of education exactly what you put in. If you’re just going to school with no goal in mind then it gets rough but all education can provide value.

Also gotta give you props on the reward system. No idea what children’s psychologists would say but I’ve always had the reward system work from a personal and word of mouth perspective.

To clarify, I mean the way we go about teaching is a joke. It never seems to evolve with the goal of teaching kids important skills.

To further clarify, I'm not ragging on teachers. I'm being critical of the system.
 

Help Support Us

Become a patron