While this is not easy stuff it is pretty straightforward information to learn, and the classroom lectures have enough discussion to make it interesting. I'm enjoying studying about US government in an election year, and who knew microeconomics could explain so much?
Here's some advice: do NOT skip the reading. Don't even think about it! On this kind of schedule there's no room for slacking off, because the very next day you'd be lost.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Saturday, June 16, 2012
College vs High School
No worksheets, no daily grades, no attendance, no bathroom passes, no tardy slips.
Instead a syllabus and lots of reading, tests and research papers we know about far in advance. Also time for discussion, asking questions, debating opinions.
And no substitute teachers.
Instead a syllabus and lots of reading, tests and research papers we know about far in advance. Also time for discussion, asking questions, debating opinions.
And no substitute teachers.
Friday, June 8, 2012
College classes
Reporting from my first college summer classes: My first experience of summer school and college courses is so far a positive one. Two hours a day, five days a week with reading and homework every night makes for an intensive learning experience, but I think I like it. Even with two classes (yes, that's right, boys and girls, four hours a day in class, reading and homework every night x2) it's manageable, but the interesting thing is how much I'm learning. So this is my summer so far...
Labels:
college,
dual credit,
high school,
summer
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