Those two "special" classes are not going to be the same as the magnet programs, and even if it's one less, it's still not the same. |
in response to the PP underlined, Not sure if this is the right etiquette but I copied and pasted this post from the AEI thread: "Applaud MCPS for offering this new option for high achieving students who wish to stay in their home middle schools but one humanities class and one math class is not going to offer just "one course less" than the magnet experience. At Eastern for instance there are 4 magnet humanities classes offered in 6th grade. Students read Animal Farm in English as they study the Russian Revolution in World History. They read "The Good Earth" in English class as they study Chinese History in their World History class and read "Red Scarf Girl" a memoir of the Cultural Revolution in their Literature in the Humanities class. They work on related projects in their Media class. Also while the peer group might be great in a high performing middle school there is something different about being with 100 kids pulled from 16 high school clusters." |
My God. I'm inclined to be sympathetic to disappointed parents, but this is just foot stamping nonsense at this point. This whole thread is a case study in hoarding opportunity and deep resentment at the idea that someone else might get a chance to reach their potential. |
| American public schools are not like the schools some people here experienced in their home countries. Unfortunately this magnet cycle may have been a rude awakening. The mission of the US Department of Education is this: "ED's mission is to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness by fostering educational excellence and ensuring equal access." Note the "and ensuring equal access" part, which had to be a goal because this country has a very long history of restricting access to education by race and class. The mission is not to reward the top test-takers or to winnow out the best students for the purpose of plum jobs or college spots, like it may be in some countries. I feel as if we are speaking a different language from one another here. |
Look up thread.. those classes are not the same. And if you think "One less" class is the same, then why not offer the "one less" class program to the magnet program, and offer one more class to the other MSs? |
.. at the expense of others based on where they live. It's not about "hoarding". It's about equitable access, which this new method does not provide in the case of "peer cohort". If they did away with the cohort nonsense, the whole thread would go away. |
If they did away with cohort, there would still be kids who didn't get in, so I don't think we'd be better off in terms of complaining. But they've ALWAYS considered peer cohort because they have always had to figure out how to best distribute limited seats. Allowing kids with strong peer cohorts to remain in their home schools, while providing opportunities to kids who don't have the same advantage in terms of peer cohort, is and always has been the best way to distribute a scarce resource. It maximizes benefit. |
I am pretty sure that it's ironic for parents who live in Bethesda and Potomac to complain about inequitable access in the context of MCPS, but my intuitive understanding of irony has been messed up since 1995 (damn you, Alanis Morissette). |
I don't recall in previous years MCPS mentioning "peer cohort" as a bases of admittance, like they are doing now. Most of the complaints recently are about peer cohort, so yes, I think a lot of the "whining" would go away if they did away with that. |
it is inequitable access to a magnet program that the district provides supposedly to everyone, but they ding you if you have a peer cohort at your home school. That's not equitable access. If you are referring to the fact that those rich kids in Bethesda and Potomac have more access to enrichment both in and outside of school, that's not enrichment provided by the school district. If it were, then it would be inequitable. |
This should be a pinned post. Someone in one of these threads posted about how magnet admissions should be more like uni admissions in Russia or India. Which...leaving aside the issues of corruption in those systems, and leaving aside that we are talking about 8 year-olds, not 18 year-olds, that's not how America works. Social mobility is a core national ideal, and you cannot square that with a system that tracks kids from kindergarten onward and then subjects them to high-stakes testing at 16 that determines their college major and life trajectory. |
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MCPS might as well just follow the AAP model in FCPS. That would be better than what we have now with the cohort nonsense.
- keep magnet programs for the highest achievers - have local programs for high achievers in their local schools |
But in contrast to this year the "new classes" won't have a mix of ability levels sitting in the seats (2012 C2.0 thing from before, don't want to embarrass the poor performers so let them make fun of the high performers by putting them all in same class). The two "enriched" classes will have selected higher performers so that class can discuss more (these such kids yearn for class discussions from more than just 3 kids of the 33), go deeper, and do more meaningful projects. |
but the tests don't matter as much now. just pass the new lower bar and then let the diversity experts do their thing based on where you live. curious how the last couple years of Blue Ribbon ESs did with admits to CES versus the last few years. Blue RIbbon is synonymous with high PARCC scores. |
MSers are not 8 yrs olds (I believe this thread is about MS magnet). Equitable access means -- it doesn't matter where you live, too. I thought merit was also an American value. If MCPS doesn't care about test scores then why are they trying to close the achievement gap and publish test score stats? |