It's not. The troll farm is working overtime. |
| Some of you calling the OP a troll have no clue what goes on inside mcps schools. I am a para at a Silver Spring elementary and I’ve seen everything the OP has described. |
Para at a W and agree 100%. Parents are in such denile about what is really happening in MCPS |
Well I'm just a teacher at a DCC school but these posts seem overly dramatic, and histrionic. |
Very easy to tell the real teachers from the people posing as teachers on here. Grow up. |
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The worst was having McKnight visit my school last week and write up how wonderful it was to visit and see such engaged children. However, she "forgot" to mention that we have 3 elementary school classrooms without teachers, fights in the hallways and recess, Kids crying about how dangerous their classes are, and almost all students struggling academically. But clearly, the parents on this board believe the photo ops and think things are going swimmingly.
I have a feeling that once the problems really infiltrate the W schools, then you'll believe the teachers but there won't be many left. No current teacher is suggesting that anyone go into teaching. It's a horrible profession right now which is sad because it was always my dream job. |
I’m also a teacher at a DCC school and see most of what the OP has shared on a daily basis. We don’t have lockers at our school, so the students don’t leave the room for their supplies. However, the comments about the snacks, use of fidgets (often provided by the counselor), drawing/doodling during instruction (resulting in missing key points of a lesson), opting out of doing homework (which is only a few math problems 3 or 4 days a week), disrespect, the need to discuss their feelings immediately, etc., are all happening at my school as well. |
The vast majority of kids, SN or NT, do not need a snack during class “for health reasons.” You sound pretty clueless. |
I think she should have to visit the elementary schools with the SESES programs and see what happens on a daily basis. She can pick up what I like to call one of the “Viking shield walls” (large, padded protection that the staff can put between themselves and the students when the students become physical and throw things at adults) on her way into each classroom. She will see firsthand the damage to the rooms and hear the same language we hear throughout the hallway. Whatever you can imagine students saying, it’s much worse in reality. The staff that work in these programs look she’ll-shocked every day. |
I think it has actually infiltrated the W schools, but lots of those families can easily go private. It’s really a bummer for middle class families who rely on a solid public education system. Our public education system is in shambles, and it stinks. |
| I work at one of the top elementary schools that feed into a W school. There are many kids completely out of control and it’s because of the parents. They are in complete denial and make excuses for their horribly behaved children. There are no shortcuts to raising children (I am a mother as well so I get it). However, to those parents- I always think, ok, I have one frustrating year with your kid but good luck- you’ve made your bed and you’re going to wish you had set limitations, taken away devices, held your child accountable, and stopped fixing all of their problems when they get older. If your kid wants to keep throwing a temper tantrum in class bc they don’t get their way, then so be it. They can sit in the hallway for all I care and not learn. I have 24 other kids to worry about and I’m done devoting all my attention to one brat who has obnoxious parents. Having this mindset has made an enormous difference! |
How would you know? |
Oh, it’s happening. The thing is, I now just consider these behaviors a “normal” day in my classroom. Maybe there are pockets of utopian classrooms in the county, but even the teacher from the W feeder school posted about the challenges she faces on a daily basis. |
Do they dock your pay whe you to go off script? |