The idea that you can plan anything for a kid in middle school is one of the funniest things I have read here.
Be happy if your kid survives middle school intact. Forget about doing much more.
Kids of this age group are making decisions based a lot more on emotions and impulses than anything related to long-term planning, and couching anything in terms of “preparing for college” will likely have outcome which is the opposite of what you hoped.
Some kids, especially boys, are not yet close enough to puberty in sixth grade that they you will be able to get them to do stuff that is helpful for high school. As for college? Very funny.
All that aside, I am sorry, but say what? They are 6th graders, for heaven’s sake! Let them have a childhood. Let them learn how to be people, rather than force them to learn how to be good applicants for the “right” college.
The obsession about getting kids into a “good college” is out of control. The idea that so many upper middle class parents have that attending a “good college” is the most important part of the first 18 years of a kid’s life is insane, illogical, and, to be quite honest, extremely toxic.
If parents are more interested in “creating the perfect Ivy League Applicant” from their kid, rather than trying to let their kid discover their own strengths and weaknesses, develop their own interests and passions, and to learn to enjoy accomplishments for accomplishments’ sake, they are, in my opinion, sorry excuses for parents.
At every single stage of schools, be it kindergarten, elementary, middle, or high school, parents should be helping their kid do their best, and succeed at that stage of their life.
@emi722 what you should be doing is exactly that. Make sure that your kid has what they need to do their best in middle school. That doesn’t mean that you should ignore the next academic stage, but only as a continuation of the middle school process. So if your kid really likes math, starting them on the most advanced math available is great, and it doesn’t hurt to think ahead about what courses the kid will be taking in high school that will feed into the kid’s interest.
As for “starting activities in middle school so that they will have leadership positions in high school”? That is ridiculous, because A, in high school, things tend to reset, and B, I will repeat - colleges like seeing “leadership”, not “leadership positions”
In middle school my kid was in math club, and robotics club, and was doing extremely well. She had a bunch of regional math competition awards, as well as regional and state-level robotics awards, and she played in the band. She went to high school, and did not participate in any of these extra curricular activities. Well, except dance, but she had been doing it since first grade, long before either me or my wife even knew about EC’s and their effects on admissions in some colleges.
This was true of all of her friends - things changed drastically after middle school.
In short, planning for college in middle school is a waste of time and money, and succeeding can be worse than failing. Worse than that - it risks ignoring the drastic changes that are happening in (and to) kids at this age, which can have disastrous results.