This isn’t true. In the past 5-6 years, the culture at Asfs really shifted. There is a big emphasis on sel and the counselor is very tuned into individual kids needs. My kid had emotional/anxiety issues the year before covid, and the counselor was already aware when I contacted them to discuss options. They made many accommodations without any sort of iep/etc. Other parents had similar experiences. The counselor retired last year, but I don’t think it’s different sel wise than other schools. More homework yes. Uncaring no. |
The counselor who is still there is great. And SEL is definitely part of curriculum now. There was a bunch during covid. I think the push was there before covid though.
And generally there isn’t as much homework as there was several years ago. For good or bad. |
Can you talk about how much homework there is? I hope this will shift as the parent and student population shifts. But what’s the homework situation like now? |
I'm a PP a really happy to hear the shift towards SEL. |
It varies by grade level and things may be different post-pandemic, but several years ago even young grades (1st/2nd) would have daily homework. Word study, math sheets, etc. A few years later (kid 2) that dropped to just reading + a homework menu (just 1 activity/night). For 3rd kid, it was just reading. Not sure what older grades will look like this year. But for my older kids they were very well-prepared for middle school. 6th grade was a breeze. |
This is accurate -- there hasn't been homework during COVID, so it'll be interesting to see if it gets revived. Used to be about 10-15 minutes math (a worksheet), 10-15 minutes word study (doesn't exist anymore, got replaced by lexia), and 20 minutes reading. That level was pretty consistent from 2nd grade on, with fourth and fifth graders getting a little extra (projects, a weekly reader's response, etc.). Since word study got dropped, there's only math and reading homework daily. Its not much and I think teaches pretty good time management. |
That principal is not old school. She is classic mean girl. Ive got no problems with traditional and strict, but I don’t like playing favorites where the popular parents run the school (to their kids’ benefit of course). An old fashioned and strict principal would kick those parents to the curb. This one doesn’t because she is classic mean girl. She picked on my kid 4 years ago (like really, picked on him in front of other teachers and my kid). I had read stuff like this on DCUM in the years before and didn’t believe it. She’s not a nice person. Luckily, my kid is fine in MS now. Despite ASFS not because of it. |
Maybe, but we were not popular parents by any stretch (we are mostly invisible I suspect as far as Principal is concerned) and our child had a good experience and we felt had lots of opportunities and needs met well. I honestly don't even know how you know who popular parents are, is it the PTA? |
I think the “popular” thing was back when there were more transfers.
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I interviewed for a transfer position and she was so rude I was in shock. |
Like a job or transfer student? |
Employee |
This school is so 2015. |
I love her. Got some popcorn to watch the new parents. |
Lolz... they at the wrong school |