No, mag chem and mag phys are single period, they just get a full year credit for a semester course. |
I figured someone from MCPS would try to weasel out a response. Here's a typical California school course catalog: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Wl9jrSsTLB_PCkE_edALCsbf72uQeDPrVx38HANJrXk/edit The first thing you'll notice is the rich course offerings their kids receive. Ex. Physics of the Universe, Physics 1-2 APEX, Physics 1-2 Honors. Quite different from the standard slab MCPS offers. Also notice that Chemistry is two semesters. Physics is two semesters. The reason is that it takes a full year for a high schooler to grasp the material. Kids really won't absorb much in just two quarters. Think it's unusual? Think its not the norm? Okay. Here's another one: https://jurupausd.org/schools/PatriotHighSchool/Documents/HS%20Course%20Guide%202020-2021.pdf I can keep posting these all night long. I believe that MCPS is trying to squeeze through as many kids as possible because they have so few science teachers that are any good, so they cut down the class to half a year so twice as many kids can run through the same teacher. You just admitted it yourself 'Demand for these programs far exceeds capacity.' |
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I award you no points. I graduated many years ago from the Blair magnet. Physics, Chemistry, Earth Science, Biology - all done by the end of 10th grade. (I recall them being one semester each but I forget whether they were double period or not. Maybe biology was double period.) All the sciences are accelerated so you can take lots of electives in 11th and 12th grade. It starts lower order to higher order. I didn't buy into the reasoning, but either way it's not hard for a 9th grader to learn physics at all. It's all simple equations and any calculus you need has simple practical shorthand.
By accelerated, I don't mean half-finished, I mean the same compressed track on which everything happens. Algebra II/Precalculus math content is shrunk to three semesters from four. Functions (which you have to have special scores just to get into) shrinks that into two semesters. Two years of computer science training and halfway through you could take the AP comp sci exam. Then how about the electives? Differential equations? Analytical chemistry? Optics? Artificial intelligence? This whole squeeze through as many kids as possible is just absolute hogwash. The magnet has not changed its fundamental approach in decades. It is not a "typical" program. I go on DCUM like once a year and all the infighting I obviously don't care for but I do have to step in for this one. |
This doesn't seem to make a lot of sense to compress the math that much, even for really bright kids. Algebra 2 and Pre-Cal are hard enough. |
Not really. |
TBH, I'm not sure what your point is. You can list all the course catalogs in the world, but I don't see why they are relevant. You clearly haven't looked at the Blair SMCS course offerings if you think that "Physics 1-2 Honors" is a more "rich course offering" than what SMCS kids have access to. My kid is more into Bio than Physics, but their course plan includes courses in Genetics and Cellular Physiology, which wouldn't typically be offered at the high school level. This is possible because of the earlier compression. |
+1. Alg. 2 and Pre-calc are where the kids should be at as they start the magnet program. It is (relatively) baby math, and the kids should be able to handle it so as to get to the really fun parts of math. |