What you “see” and predict that students will score (particularly students who are not your own kids) is useless. As the other PP mentioned, look up your school’s historical AP performance by school as it’s posted on the MCPS site. If it’s bad, perhaps it’s a problem of your kid’s teacher and/or their chosen curriculum, or perhaps your kids are just at a poorly performing school. |
DP. People who whine about "critical race theory" ar outing themselves as idiots. https://www.albert.io/blog/ultimate-ap-english-literature-reading-list/ 1. Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison Ellison’s Invisible Man is a long read but it is definitely worth your time. It expertly tackles race and bigotry, and its effect on the minds of everyone involved. Themes of race, identity, ideology, and stereotypes are explored. This is the most frequently referenced title on the AP® English Literature book list since 1971. |
+1 My kid is reading a Shakespeare play in MCPS middle school. And some short stories by widely respected authors. And 2 books as of MP2. But even if they were reading zero books and all plays and short stories, I wouldn’t complain that having no books made the class inherently bad. That’s just narrow -minded thinking. |
If that’s the book that the PP is writing about it in such a derogatory way, I pity them. Too bad they are allowing political views get in their way of appreciating a great work of literature. |
How dare you bring data on educational outcomes into a discussion about the PP’s opinions into what makes a good education. /s |
My 4th grader read many books and wrote long essays in ELC last year and it was great. So I’m salty that’s the program that MCPS ditched for no apparent reason. We were told MCPS would be great for gifted kids and so far that really has not been the case. |
| We have one 2e SN student and one on the high-end of average and have been so happy with MCPS (although we are only through MS now). |
| We've been really happy with MCPS. That said, our experience was not typical. Early elementary was very good with just one dud of a teacher in 2nd, then our kid was in selective magnets that they could walk to for 4th - 8th grade and they now attend a top performing high school. They are very bright, self-motivated, and can thrive in a large school setting. So our experience is not worth a lot because it requires a lot of special dominos lining up, which for us they did, but they won't for many. |
Its the curriculum the teacher has chosen and refusal to teach with the assigned AP books. |
Every school and teacher makes different choices so the narrow mided thinking is on you not to understand that your children's experiences are not the same as other posters whose experiences are very different than yours. |
The PP never wrote that their childrens’ MCPs. experiences were universal. Adults with a functioning brain can understand that experience in a large public school system will differ wildly. They wrote that someone who uses the argument that an AP English class that teaches “only one book” must be inherently bad is narrow minded. You should work on your reading comprehension rather than critiquing the choices of a fictional English teacher that you complain is only assigning critical race theory for AP English. |
what are the “assigned AP books” in your opinion? And why are you unwilling to name the HS you say is teaching AP English so poorly in your opinion? |
We weren't assigned a critical race theory book. It was someone else as I would have been thrilled, as at least they were reading a book and we'd talk about it at home. AP English should be reading at least 2 books a quarter, not two books a year. |
OP, did you post in the DC forum as well? I think I see a very similar question. I would keep in mind that there are a lot more MCPS families and therefore, likely more complaints!
I'm a previous PP with a child in upper ES that's a focus school. We switched to MCPS from DC (charter school though) but did so for other factors as well, not just schools. I am happy that my child may have access to more options/pathways in MCPS (CES, magnet programs) that were not available in DC, but I also recognize that these programs are not guaranteed to exist when my child gets to high school. We were hoping to eventually use the DCC but now that's going away. I personally wouldn't take into much consideration what parents of much older children are saying here since so much can change between now and then, but I do think MCPS overall has more resources. My child is several years older than yours, and I remember the stress of trying to decide what to do for kindergarten and reading through these forums. Now, we take it the school experience year by year and try to anticipate/plan for needs 2-3 years in the future. Every year has brought us better understanding of not just what our child needs but what we, as parents, expect and want from a school. I personally would not change school districts for just kindergarten (unless of course there were other factors involved) but would instead use that first year as time to learn and refine your family's priorities. |
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We moved to MCPS from DC public (a well regarded charter with a decent high school path). Shifting from the DCPS board on DCUM to the MCPS board on DCUM has led me to believe that the MCPS parents on DCUM are a set of demanding, highly educated people with apparently no experience with public schools anywhere else. I wonder where they all grew up. Was it here? Anyway, the focus is on very niche things, often, and not the collective school system. The conversations are very different. DCPS DCUM posters would called onto the carpet for things that MCPS posters frequently complain about (eg. very specific and uncommon AP courses).
So, op, I think MCPS DCUM posters are a very select, very narrow slice of MCPS parents and their complaints here should not be taken a indicative of the overall performance of the school system. |