| I teach at an interest based High school program. Many students use them just to change high school. I’d say about 25% of my students. There are pro’s and con’s to this. But typically they are less concerned about grades in general in my case. Usually they are trying to avoid drama or some other issue in the home school. |
Re: the need to water down teaching due to lottery—this is due to the lowered criteria. Criteria should be at minimum 90 percentile. Re: interest-based MS magnets—this is not a good comparison. Students zoned in that area must choose between the three schools or else they will be randomly placed. Inevitably a portion of the schools—especially one in particular—will have students who have no interest in the subject area. In the regional model, students have to apply, so this is a completely different scenario. The regional model’s interest-based programs would be susceptible to students who have no interest and want to escape their home school, as a PP pointed out. This would ruin these programs. |
No the solution to that is appropriate grading and rigor. Which is what is being banged into everyone’s head with this Program Analysis, absentee rate, cell phone policy, etc. |
1000% this |
Appropriate grading? That would be the inflated grades that school leadership signals are needed in order for the school to avoid negative scrutiny from CO. |
Completely agree. I’ve been very open to the changes until this development. |
It appears that each high school is allowed only one criteria-based program - for Poolesville and Blair, these are their science-math magnets; humanities and communications programs at the schools have been shifted to interest-based programs. |
| STEM programs are remaining criteria-based, while every single Humanities program is becoming interest-based. All of them. The STEM programs will have their talent diluted by spreading it out among so many locations and the Humanities programs will not even admit students based on ability. |
Northwood is getting 2 criteria based programs, and the issue remains that none of the Humanities programs are criteria based but most of the STEM ones are. That's a real shame and demonstrates contempt for the critical thinking skills that a humanities program fosters. |
MCPS just spent more than $64 million designing and constructing Poolesville’s new building (which just opened in April of 2024) around these specific programs, and giving the building nearly 3 times the core capacity of the number of students who are actually zoned for it. Now they’re completely re-imagining these programs and rushing the implementation of changes. They sure are visionaries and great stewards of our resources. |
Exactly this. |
Please testify, or email BOE and Taylor and Porter! |
It will be interesting to see the funding that will be allocated to build to new regional program requirements. This, when we have multiple schools with terrible facility problems. |
I’m not aware of any plans to renovate or build anything due to these program changes. The whole idea is to shoehorn them into existing schools while changing boundaries. |
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These changes amount to MCPS treating STEM programs like they’re vocational training for white collar jobs and humanities programs like they’re a hobby.
Who needs employees who are skilled researchers, critical thinkers, creative problem solvers, effective communicators, trained to evaluate source material, experienced with collaboration, and who understand the historical context of past policies and the likely future ramifications of today’s policy proposals? |