I attended pre-school at Play & Learn in Ambler, PA. This program is currently licensed by the Pennsylvania Department of Education and uses a hands-on method for learning that makes it super fun. I attended Play & Learn for 2 years for school and summer camp before going to kindergarten.
Kindergarten
I attended kindergarten at the Village Schoolhouse, a private school in Jarrettown, PA. My class size was relatively small, about 10-12 kids, and we all became fast friends. We got to take classes like music (in the big piano room!), arts and crafts (clay was my favorite), and the "usual" kindergarten curriculum. At the end of the year we had to take a placement test that showed our knowledge after the year of education. As I recall I did quite well on the test, but that was moot because my parents decided to enroll me in public school for the rest of my elementary school career.
Elementary School
I started at Fort Washington Elementary School in first grade when I was 5, turning 6. The school was literally 3 and a half blocks from my house - easily within walking and biking distance. I was one of the youngest kids in my grade but that was ok with me because I was smart enough to keep up with them. In second grade I took a standardized test and had an interview with a psychologist in order to be placed in the "gifted program." The program wasn't an accelerated track, however. Rather, the few of us that there were got taken out of our classrooms once a week to meet with the gifted teacher. We got extra assignments, usually reading more advanced books, and learned Spanish from her. In fifth grade they tried to make the gifted program solely about politics and world events, which as an energetic 10 year-old I wasn't interested in. Instead I got to take mechanical drawing with another class during the gifted meeting time. It was super fun, and math-oriented just like I was.
Middle School
For me, middle school years were filled with awkwardness and injury. I attended Sandy Run Middle School in Dresher, PA for years six thru eight. Sixth grade I was on the "Green Team." We were sectioned into "Oceans, Rivers, and Seas" and I was a "sea." All of the students on the team who were "seas" went to their classes together except for electives like physical education, art, technology/woodworking, and family/consumer sciences. All of the sixth graders took the four languages that were offered in the district, each for one quarter of the year: Latin, French, German, and Spanish. At the end of the year we had to decide what language we would pursue for the rest of middle school. I chose Spanish. The "gifted program" started to actually mean something in seventh grade. We got to choose which subject we were most interested in - math/science or English/writing - and I of course chose math/science. We would meet once a week during advisory, the last period of the day when we got to sit around and do homework, and do puzzles and things of that nature. Sometimes we even got taken out of a class! Eighth grade was exciting, as I was one of only 10 students in the grade who got to take Algebra II. The teacher, however, was not good and so we didn't really learn anything from her. In Eighth grade I also tried out for the high school cheerleading squad and made JV with 6 other eighth graders.
High School
Freshman Year |
My high school was an upper middle class high school with 77% of students white, 12% Asian, 7% African American, 1% Hispanic, and <1% Indian/Pacific Islander. My classes, however, were predominantly filled with white students and occasionally Asian. Rarely were there African American students in the classes that I was in and so I had no real interaction with them. After taking the PSSAs (Pennsylvania State Standard Assessment) in 11th grade, Upper Dublin was ranked 30th in the state out of 641 schools. At the time my grade scored 74.6% proficient or higher in mathematics and 86.0% proficient or higher in reading. According to the Upper Dublin website, UDHS is consistently ranked in the top 10 schools out of 501 school districts in Pennsylvania with high SAT scores. The mean SAT scores for the class of 2009 were 562 Verbal, 586 Math, and 569 Writing. About 10% of high school seniors are National Merit Finalists and Commended Scholars (my year of 381 students had 13 National Merit Finalists and 16 Commended Scholars). Also, more than 95% of seniors enroll in post-secondary education, either at two- or four-year colleges/universities, and the graduation rate at UDHS is above 99%. At the end of my senior year, Upper Dublin was named the #1 public school in Montgomery County by the Philadelphia Inquirer.
I love the adorable pictures of you in this post!
ReplyDeleteI can relate to your view of taking AP classes. I only took 2 and hated my life while I was in them. It was tons of work (much more intense than most Elon classes I've taken) and consumed a lot of my time that I wish I had spent on other activities.
I think it's awesome that you were so talented and involved in with cheerleading. I wish I had joined a team sport or some organizations at my high school. That's a part of high school that I feel I really missed out on, and having indulged in other extracurricular activities would have probably made me more of a well-rounded person.
I DEFINITELY would have guessed that you were always a math person and did exceedingly well in math throughout your school years. I'm jealous that you were always so good at and interested in math!
It's interesting to see that your high school was not very diverse. Have you met a variety of different people now that you've been at Elon?