| Wow, please do not let virtual school become a thing. So short sighted |
You know Baltimore County Public Schools is separate from Baltimore City Public Schools, right? Let's see what the reactions are after Friday. Like MCPS's awful attempt at an asynchronous day, this might go poorly enough that MSDE kills off virtual days entirely! Which they should. |
Great. I would like to see: 1) What percentage of kids showed up for the virtual days 2) How engaged those students who showed up for the virtual learning days were 3) What impact those virtual learning days had on their ability to achieve state-required proficiencies in math and reading Once that data is in, and if it's compelling, then we can say that MCPS is doing something wrong by not following in these two districts' footsteps. |
+100. These people must have the memory of a goldfish. We already know how awful this is. And that was with more preparation! |
Also explain how the virtual school days are providing the services and supports identified in students' IEPs. |
Can you share data first on the impact of providing zero schooling because you’re too lazy to do second best options? |
Do they not have IEPs in Baltimore and Anne Arundel? Hint: They do as they’re required by federal law. Perhaps the MCPS staff can call them and figure out how a well organized school district manages to educate their kids after they exhaust the 3 snow days they built into the calendar when MCPS is so incompetent it only includes one snow day. |
+1 million. There is zero evidence that providing zero education is superior to virtual education. |
MCPS has to do make-up days. I'm sorry that will disrupt your summer vacation, but you should have known this would happen. Especially after last year. |
And again, we should hear how Baltimore and Anne Arundel county provide special education services and supports over the next two days. Or, if like MCPS during the pandemic, they just don't. |
No one is saying that. But MCPS has an obligation under Maryland law to make up the lost days to reach 180. |
A lot of the data on how poorly virtual learning during COVID went pretty much said that virtual school was pretty much the same as not going to school, in terms of what students were able to achieve with academic benchmarks. So yeah, the data is out there on virtual learning and how much it sucks on a MASS scale. You can make it work for a class, assuming the majority of students and families are well-resourced and highly motivated. You can maybe even make it work for a small private school, where everyone is paying and opted-in to education. You can't make it work well for state-mandated, public school districts that don't get to pick and choose which students and families it serves. |
| A few of my kids middle school teachers sent home work last week, and have been messaging about doing it. The math teacher plans to have a math test on Monday for the material she sent home. |
My kids attended those June make up half days last year. they did nothing but watch videos and play games. I’m sorry that you don’t want kids to be educated now so they can actually do the assigned curriculum. Especially after last year. |
Feel free to cite that research. The research I read states that pandemic period learning online was detrimental to learning outcomes relative to in person learning, but I never read anything that said virtual learning is worse than no learning at all. |