Dems now targeting mcps school names

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We are graduating kids who can't read. I hardly think that focusing on John Poole as a "bad man" will remedy that situation.


You work in education?


close to 25 years
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

omg

This is true across the ages. "Strong" conquers "weak," however you wish to define these terms. Armed vs. unarmed?

Which country has a peaceful past? Iceland perhaps?

Here are some tips:
1. You don't move forward w/o honoring the past.
2. Every person is a product of his/her environment. So we take the good with the bad.
3. Even if you teach - in detail - the history behind a school's name, the kids don't give a rat's a**.
4. This is a superficial, "snowflakey" attempt at addressing inequity in the system.

We are graduating kids who can't read. I hardly think that focusing on John Poole as a "bad man" will remedy that situation.


Fortunately nobody is doing that. "John Poole owned people as property" (a statement of fact) =/= "John Poole was a bad man".

Also, a really great way to honor the past is to stop naming schools after segregationists and defenders of slavery.

(Also you evidently don't know much about the history of Iceland.)



Regarding Iceland, I didn't support my point, did I? I didn't do my research in other words; I simply guessed. So if you're referring to the Vikings and their slaves, you're just proving my point. WHICH country has a peaceful past?

This is a waste of time, IMO. Instead, we need to focus on transience/attendance, REAL grades, REAL rigor, and the teacher retention problem.

You wouldn't know b/c you're not educator, right?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We are graduating kids who can't read. I hardly think that focusing on John Poole as a "bad man" will remedy that situation.


You work in education?


close to 25 years


So what's your remedy for reversing the trend of graduating kids who can't read?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Regarding Iceland, I didn't support my point, did I? I didn't do my research in other words; I simply guessed. So if you're referring to the Vikings and their slaves, you're just proving my point. WHICH country has a peaceful past?

This is a waste of time, IMO. Instead, we need to focus on transience/attendance, REAL grades, REAL rigor, and the teacher retention problem.

You wouldn't know b/c you're not educator, right?


We can focus on all of those things and school names too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

omg

This is true across the ages. "Strong" conquers "weak," however you wish to define these terms. Armed vs. unarmed?

Which country has a peaceful past? Iceland perhaps?

Here are some tips:
1. You don't move forward w/o honoring the past.
2. Every person is a product of his/her environment. So we take the good with the bad.
3. Even if you teach - in detail - the history behind a school's name, the kids don't give a rat's a**.
4. This is a superficial, "snowflakey" attempt at addressing inequity in the system.

We are graduating kids who can't read. I hardly think that focusing on John Poole as a "bad man" will remedy that situation.


Fortunately nobody is doing that. "John Poole owned people as property" (a statement of fact) =/= "John Poole was a bad man".

Also, a really great way to honor the past is to stop naming schools after segregationists and defenders of slavery.

(Also you evidently don't know much about the history of Iceland.)



Regarding Iceland, I didn't support my point, did I? I didn't do my research in other words; I simply guessed. So if you're referring to the Vikings and their slaves, you're just proving my point. WHICH country has a peaceful past?

This is a waste of time, IMO. Instead, we need to focus on transience/attendance, REAL grades, REAL rigor, and the teacher retention problem.

You wouldn't know b/c you're not educator, right?


Agreed that this is a waste of time.

However, it is an excellent way for the BOE to get votes in a majorly liberal/Democrat run county. This plus right into what voters want.

Voters don’t care about a strong curriculum and small class sizes.
Anonymous
Part of my family comes from England and Southern Europe.

I want reparations from the Vikings.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Part of my family comes from England and Southern Europe.

I want reparations from the Vikings.


What's stopping you from asking for them?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Regarding Iceland, I didn't support my point, did I? I didn't do my research in other words; I simply guessed. So if you're referring to the Vikings and their slaves, you're just proving my point. WHICH country has a peaceful past?

This is a waste of time, IMO. Instead, we need to focus on transience/attendance, REAL grades, REAL rigor, and the teacher retention problem.

You wouldn't know b/c you're not educator, right?


We can focus on all of those things and school names too.


Except MoCo has proven incapable of focusing on “all those things.”
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Regarding Iceland, I didn't support my point, did I? I didn't do my research in other words; I simply guessed. So if you're referring to the Vikings and their slaves, you're just proving my point. WHICH country has a peaceful past?

This is a waste of time, IMO. Instead, we need to focus on transience/attendance, REAL grades, REAL rigor, and the teacher retention problem.

You wouldn't know b/c you're not educator, right?


We can focus on all of those things and school names too.


Except MoCo has proven incapable of focusing on “all those things.”


If you want to believe this, but it really isn't true.
Anonymous
OP is a triggered Trumpanzee.
Anonymous
Hey liberals none of your feel good moves will stop the decline of mcps.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Hey liberals none of your feel good moves will stop the decline of mcps.


IMO, stuff like this just makes things worse.

It takes the attention away from things that actually DO matter and make a good school system.

Changing a name of a school might earn votes, but it's not going to help the kids at that school perform better. MCPS needs to focus on making changes that help kids learn and help teachers do their jobs.

This stuff is completely nonsense.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hey liberals none of your feel good moves will stop the decline of mcps.


IMO, stuff like this just makes things worse.

It takes the attention away from things that actually DO matter and make a good school system.

Changing a name of a school might earn votes, but it's not going to help the kids at that school perform better. MCPS needs to focus on making changes that help kids learn and help teachers do their jobs.

This stuff is completely nonsense.


You all sure are spending a lot of time and energy on opposing this, I must say. One might almost conclude that the idea of changing school names really bothers you.
Anonymous
The biggest irony of this is Montgomery County Public Schools is James after the County and the County is named after Richard Montgomery. It’s absurd, changing names doesn’t change history.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hey liberals none of your feel good moves will stop the decline of mcps.


IMO, stuff like this just makes things worse.

It takes the attention away from things that actually DO matter and make a good school system.

Changing a name of a school might earn votes, but it's not going to help the kids at that school perform better. MCPS needs to focus on making changes that help kids learn and help teachers do their jobs.

This stuff is completely nonsense.


You all sure are spending a lot of time and energy on opposing this, I must say. One might almost conclude that the idea of changing school names really bothers you.


It does because it’s ridiculous. And it just goes along with the other ridiculous crap that MCPS and the BOE does.
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