| I don’t think their academics are great but you don’t want academics and need child care so try this place. https://www.silveroakscooperative.org/ |
K-2 "homework" takes 10 minutes. It isn't graded. It's one math worksheet. You could skip it, but it's just practice. And then there are "tricky words," etc. which you're already doing anyway through reading with your kid. It's really not a hill to die on. |
| It is easy to simply opt out of homework in K-2 at TPES. As long as your kiddo understands the material, there is no need to reinforce with a worksheet at home, and we haven't ever had any teachers worry about it. To get more movement, because outdoor time is limited, walk to and from school if you can. Plenty of people walk with their kindergarteners, it is a mile for us and no problem. That also avoids your kids watching cartoons while they wait for the bus at the end of the day. As for screens in class, it depends on the teacher but there is a huge flatscreen that takes the place of a blackboard and they write on that and show visuals. It is actually kind of cool. But the reality is that screens are integrated into the curriculum. I wish there was more physical activity, but that is just the reality of public school these days. |
Takoma Park MS has gone downhill. I don't know if that trend will continue. |
We sent our kid to private. 🙃 |
This is OP. I’m an Ivy grad and my husband also went to a prestigious college. We value education, but done in a healthy manner. To others providing helpful responses and clarification, thank you!! |
We lived in DC and sent our kids to a charter Montessori. Which everyone else in this thread send to not understand is also public school. Then we moved to MCPS when they were older and sadly everything is on screens |
Agree. Unfortunately the current principal is a disaster. Dr G at TPES is great though |
You can afford private. |
| You won't need to worry about grades. In kindergarten and 1st, the "grades" aren't letter grades. Instead, it is language about "demonstrating", "progressing," "not yet demonstrated," etc. This is helpful to see where your child may have some needs to work on at home. Not necessarily academic topics, either. The topics are things like following directions, for example. That is also why homework isn't anything to worry about for the first few years. There is no graded work in kindergarten and first grade. They start to give grades in 2nd grade at TPES (maybe everywhere, I don't know). There are plenty of parents at TPES who are no screen or low screen families, but also plenty who use screens regularly. It's a mix. You will be able to find other parents who have the same no screen approach, but your child may make friends with families who have different ideas about screens. Since you asked for tips, hosting playdates at your house can help make sure the playdate is about play and not watching TV together. In addition, there are some good after school programs that pick up from TPES (walking) and have an outdoor component. I think Nature Lab is one. |
| Takoma Park parent here with two kids who have gone through the public schools. I think you will find like minded families. it can be helpful to reach out, organize with them, and reinforce norms related to screens and in favor of in person and outdoor play. Screen use in classrooms ramped way up during the pandemic across the county and Takoma schools were no different. If there has been a failure to recalibrate post-pandemuc, my sense is that its not because there's a cohort of meritocratic parents in love with testing and measurement but that the schools are trying to do a lot with a little and somehow got stuck in the trap of digitized platforms being the solution. It's wrongheaded but i think parents can assert some boundaries with teachers, share their concerns with principals and the PTA regularly, and band together to create healthier norms within friend groups. |
OP here. I truly wish there were public Montessori options. I think PG County also has a public Montessori. |
Can you relocate to a rural area, smaller city, or different part of the country? You will not find that sort of healthy environment in the DC area. Or just going farther out, you may find a healthier environment. There is a low-cost private that fits your description but it is near Baltimore. Starting in MS, it is screens all the time at MCPS. |
You are both professionals, with degrees for Ivy's or strong schools, as you brag. Change jobs and find a way to pay for private. How do you pay for child care now? Or, homeschool. |
Where’s the brag? I literally said in the first post that we sacrificed our childhoods for academics. Hearing mixed responses, it sounds like MCPS might be better than I feared in the early years and that looking into alternatives isn’t a bad idea. |