Can't speak for all advanced classes, but the AP exams will have been over more than a month before this. Doubt they will have any tests on those last few make up days. |
Some of us actually want our kids to have 180 days of school, like students in the rest of the country. If you haven't notice, half of MCPS students can't read or do math at grade level. |
Seriously. Is MCPS finally going to submit the virtual learning for weather emergency plans it told its Board it would do in 2024? I wish I could be an MCPS employee, so I could also be 2 years late with my work. |
+1. The state should require MCPS to have more days in the calendar since they are unwilling to use contingency days before June. |
Oh look a Mad Mommy of MoCo is Big Mad and wants to micromanage MCPS like a Karen. |
Not all of the country has a 180 day requirement and many of those that do allow 180 days to count as 990-1080 hours. It's only Maryland, New Jersey, Connecticut and Massachusetts that have a strict 180 calendar day makeup day requirement. |
And these are all states with better educational outcomes than Maryland. Massachusetts requires school districts to schedule 185 days of school a year for a minimum of 180 days. Because it snows there too, and they don’t shortchange kids instructional time the way Maryland does. |
Repeating that claim over and over again doesn't make it true. California also requires 180 days in addition to meeting instructional time requirements. Illinois requires 176 days without allowing districts to satisfy it with a hour-based equivalent. Michigan requires 180 days while also requiring 1098 hours. I didn't check others, but it certainly isn't just those 4 states that have instructional day minimums. |
Micromanagement is needed when MCPS is failing kids |
Some teachers who don’t have mostly seniors do other stuff. We had one history teacher do a section on financial literacy. |
My MS kid did some “cool science experiments” during the June half days last year. I wish MCPS had planned better and learned its lesson last year rather than pulling this lazy BS trying to short change kids from instructional time with a waiver each year, but it’s not fair to say no one is teaching. Some teachers certainly do. They’re professionals after all. |
+1 I think MCPS's blatant efforts to provide as little instructional time and work hours as possible within legal constraints (repeatedly building in only one snow day after repeatedly needing more, meeting the state requirements with useless half days at the end of the year, giving office staff an entire week off for a snow storm when most workers were back after 2 days) are indicative of an entitled bureaucracy that exists to serve itself and nobody else. No surprise they are constantly changing the curricula so whoever is in charge can take credit for something and laser focused on creating new specialized programs when they have utterly failed at properly implementing and supporting the programs they have in place. The people in charge at MCPS are sociopaths and they DGAF that the majority of students are not graduating at a baseline level of proficiency in math and science. |
Sorry that should say math and literacy |
That's right, asking a large school district to competently schedule a calendar is so entitled! |
You do not know what you are talking about. "The most common way that states regulate instructional time is to set a minimum number of days for the school year; 38 states and the District of Columbia do so. The majority of those states (27 of 38), along with D.C., mandate 180 instructional days, making it the closest thing the country has to a national norm." https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/09/07/in-the-u-s-180-days-of-school-is-most-common-but-length-of-school-day-varies-by-state/ |