UMC parents have zero excuse for no being on top of things from the jump. The schools are shady, lack transparency, and generally unreliable. That isn’t new despite the faux social contract of “you just send the kids to school well-rested/fed and we’ll do the rest and alert you to any red flags in.” It’s not fair or right, but YOU are the only one capable to ensuring that your kids are where they need to be in terms of ELA and math, just to start. That UMC types “discover” that their 3rd/4th grader hasn’t mastered grade-level math is beyond me…but I’ve come to expect it, sadly. |
I think that assertion requires some support. This isn’t a matter of pure mathematics. We can understand that you can’t improve on 5 and there is less room to grow from a 4. But I’d posit that it could very well be easier to maintain kids at 4/5 that it is to raise a kid from a 1/2 upwards. The kid with 4/5 would seem not have many accumulated academic deficits and so are primed to continue into new learning. But the 1/2s have cumulative deficits that (if not remediated, especially in math) compound year over year leaving them further from grade level standards from one year to the next. So this seems like more of an empirical question rather than one that we can just reason out with confidence. Any who cares is the ratings don’t credit already high-performing schools? Those high performing schools are full and highly-desired. And those are the metrics that UMC parents value, not OSSE reports. But parents that don’t have access to such school may appreciate data on which schools appear better able to drive student improvement from lower levels. Clearly, some schools do better on this score than others. |
Sorry I meant Washington Global |
| Is there a spreadsheet with each school's overall score available? |
Some of us have jobs to do and lives to live. Offensive. |
https://osse.dc.gov/page/dc-school-report-card-resource-library Middle of the page. |
NP here but seriously? You're offended that PP is incredulous that you don't notice your 4th grader can't add in their head? Again, PP said UMC -- so you don't have the excuse that you're working 3 jobs to put food on the table. Aren't you talking to your kids? |
This! |
Then why is it that many low-PARCC-score DCPS schools have good summative scores, and others with equally low PARCC scores have bad summative scores? |
Ding ding ding! Sometimes the cynicism isn’t justified. It’s ok to accept that OSSE generated useful data and isn’t just finding a way to stick it to high SES schools. |
Agree! This data is useful- I am reading through . Also, MGP accounts for this cynical argument-- it measures kids in score cohorts so if students are dropping from 5s to 4s or vice versa it accounts for that. And Walls being at the top even more invalidates this inaccurate and cynical argument. |
And, some of us have kids that do really well on those MAP tests from K-2 (and suddenly tank in 3rd) and have teachers telling us in 1st grade not to worry that kids will suddenly click with reading after we raise concerns. |
PreK kids are more likely to get sick. Our PK4 kiddo has been out sick 6 days already since start of the school year. I guarantee he will be out 4 more by June. 10 absences in a school year = "Chronically Absent" |
No accurate-- 10% of school days out = Chronically Absent |
I’m not finding these scores particularly transparent or useful. My guess is that they pretty arbitrarily give big penalties or premiums for things that don’t make a huge difference. Our MS seems to score way too low and I’m guessing that’s because we have just enough high SES students to skew the PARCC average but not enough to bring up the overall score. |