Sure, not expecting a definitive answer or anything. But surely when they told you the audit found a problem, there was some hint of whether they were putting anything on the school's "to do" list to fix it, wasn't there? |
None of this addresses the hard to solve and long lead items like physical space for students and teachers. To have smaller classrooms you need more teachers and more of those classrooms. Sub 20 kids in class does a lot more for learning than stocking grade level and below kids in a honors class or trying to differentiate instruction for 25-30 kids. |
How does curriculum stuff work in high school? Does MCPS pick (or design in-house) an on-grade-level and honors-level curriculum for each core class and require schools use them? Or do schools have flexibility to pick/design their own! |
Gatekeeping doesn’t need to be the goal or incentive as much as quality of instruction and similar practice across schools. What these should bring is inquiry into problems and solutions design to address quality of instruction, practice, and resource allocation. Including even pointing out if ELL, boys, black/hispanics seem to be disproportionately being left out |
Depends on the course. Some of the has specifically selected textbooks and curriculum from vendors. Some has extras that have been developed by MCPS CO. Other particularly pilot courses and magnet courses have been developed from a variety of sources and approved and then are taught by usually are very very limited number of people. |
Correct answer. Also, by making this a metric, you incentivize schools to just artificially inflate or push kids into "advanced" classes to avoid "getting in trouble" with Central Office. We need to both establish transparent, consistent criteria for honors courses and hold everyone to them. At the same time, we need to hold kids for what THEY are accountable for and not punish them for being the victims of poor classroom instruction or school mismanagement. |
All these things to justify their jobs… wouldn’t it be better to get rid of the admin layer and pay actual teachers a little more to work harder on actually teaching the students? Since when were charts more important than kids? When did we lose focus on teaching kids? |
nclb |
Are those decisions all made at the central office level, though? Or are some of them made by schools/teachers? For the core classes in the core subjects, I mean. |
We should close that out as a nice experiment that didn’t have the intended consequences. And move back to teaching kids as the clear focus of schools. They need to really remove the funding to get those useless admin people out of there. Maybe pass some laws that some maximum percentage of school funding is allowed to be spent on management and minimum of whatever needs to be spent on teachers. Although having a percentage would probably be good for massive school districts so maybe it should be a fixed amount based on the official poverty line in that area. |
+1 the bias -- both conscious and subconscious -- against certain groups, and the perception that they are not 'prepared' or capable of succeeding in AP/advanced classes, is real and a well-documented concern that systemically and persistently contributes to the underrepresentation of certain population groups in such classes. Using AP scores as the metric by which to evaluate schools just exacerbates that. |
Who is the audience for reporting these data? Many colleges know MCPS is not credible since so many courses receive the honors weighting. Parents either don't care, and the ones who do care know that the outcomes of the students in the course are more important than the % of students taking the course. |
+2 the bias is out of control. Our school published who got a 4.0, it’s more than 68 percent girls. They also published who got certain awards. If your kid is a Punky Brewster type or a Young Sheldon type, congrats, that is who always gets the awards. Always the same kids. |
Says who? Lots of parents care about access and representation. If my kid's school has great 'outcomes' in these courses, but the makeup of these courses are highly disproportionate/skewed towards certain demographics, it's only a good metric for those who belong to those demographics. If I'm a parent of a kid that's part of an underrepresented group and there's few to no students of said underrepresented group(s) in the advanced classes, why would that metric be important to me? |
students and families? The community? The school district/decision makers? I guess I may be misunderstanding your question. There are loads and loads of people who care about equal access and representation in advanced courses and would want to see that data. |