Support the Montgomery Virtual Academy (MVA) from Budget Cuts!

Anonymous
Time to shut it down already.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Time to shut it down already.


No
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Time to shut it down already.


No


True, they should let MVA run out this last week, and then shut it down.
Anonymous
We just don't have unlimited funds for these pet programs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We just don't have unlimited funds for these pet programs.


Right, so let's get rid of all the pet programs and just provide academics. Lets get rid of RJ, mental health services, PE, Sports, extra curricular, music, theater, field trips, outdoor ed and more. Let's get rid of bussing. Drive your own kids.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.


You are picking and choosing what you want to believe. A child is waiting for an organ transplant in the MVA. Is that not a good enough reason? I don't care what it costs but that child deserves an equal education and we should do what ever it takes to support them. Their life is work way more than the minimal amount the MVA costs MCPS.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.


You are picking and choosing what you want to believe. A child is waiting for an organ transplant in the MVA. Is that not a good enough reason? I don't care what it costs but that child deserves an equal education and we should do what ever it takes to support them. Their life is work way more than the minimal amount the MVA costs MCPS.


You do realize that kids experienced health emergencies that required alternative arrangements long before the county decided to start spending $5 million per year on the MVA, right? Those programs will continue to serve these kids as they had been for years before Covid sparked the creation of the MVA.
Anonymous
In the past, people from marginalized communities like the poor and girls faced obstacles that prevented them from getting an education until it was finally offered to them. Unfortunately, there are still some who don't believe that everyone should have equal access to education.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.


You are picking and choosing what you want to believe. A child is waiting for an organ transplant in the MVA. Is that not a good enough reason? I don't care what it costs but that child deserves an equal education and we should do what ever it takes to support them. Their life is work way more than the minimal amount the MVA costs MCPS.


You do realize that kids experienced health emergencies that required alternative arrangements long before the county decided to start spending $5 million per year on the MVA, right? Those programs will continue to serve these kids as they had been for years before Covid sparked the creation of the MVA.


You do realize it's the year 2024 and most districts throughout the country offer virtual schooling in some capacity,right? Most did pre-pandemic. MoCo is OBSESSED with keeping students stuck in the past. The refusal to evolve here is just amazing/embarrassing.
Anonymous
The Federal money ran out folks. Virtual program is done. For students who have medical needs there are other programs. If you want to homeschool there are also other programs. You just need to keep a portfolio of the work.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.


You are picking and choosing what you want to believe. A child is waiting for an organ transplant in the MVA. Is that not a good enough reason? I don't care what it costs but that child deserves an equal education and we should do what ever it takes to support them. Their life is work way more than the minimal amount the MVA costs MCPS.


You do realize that kids experienced health emergencies that required alternative arrangements long before the county decided to start spending $5 million per year on the MVA, right? Those programs will continue to serve these kids as they had been for years before Covid sparked the creation of the MVA.


You do realize it's the year 2024 and most districts throughout the country offer virtual schooling in some capacity,right? Most did pre-pandemic. MoCo is OBSESSED with keeping students stuck in the past. The refusal to evolve here is just amazing/embarrassing.


Again, most virtual options are offered at the STATE level. There’s no reason the state of MD can’t set something up like Virginia has. Virtual programs at the district level are pretty inefficient, even in a large district like MCPS.

With all the other cuts MCPS is proposing, the MVA is way down on my list of things to advocate funding. Sorry.
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Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.


You are picking and choosing what you want to believe. A child is waiting for an organ transplant in the MVA. Is that not a good enough reason? I don't care what it costs but that child deserves an equal education and we should do what ever it takes to support them. Their life is work way more than the minimal amount the MVA costs MCPS.


You do realize that kids experienced health emergencies that required alternative arrangements long before the county decided to start spending $5 million per year on the MVA, right? Those programs will continue to serve these kids as they had been for years before Covid sparked the creation of the MVA.


You do realize it's the year 2024 and most districts throughout the country offer virtual schooling in some capacity,right? Most did pre-pandemic. MoCo is OBSESSED with keeping students stuck in the past. The refusal to evolve here is just amazing/embarrassing.


Again, most virtual options are offered at the STATE level. There’s no reason the state of MD can’t set something up like Virginia has. Virtual programs at the district level are pretty inefficient, even in a large district like MCPS.

With all the other cuts MCPS is proposing, the MVA is way down on my list of things to advocate funding. Sorry.


No, they aren’t. You do realize not all states do districts by county like Maryland does, right? So nah…most places have virtual at the district level. I don’t really care what’s on your personal list to advocate for, I just know you’re stuck in the past. Sad.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.


You are picking and choosing what you want to believe. A child is waiting for an organ transplant in the MVA. Is that not a good enough reason? I don't care what it costs but that child deserves an equal education and we should do what ever it takes to support them. Their life is work way more than the minimal amount the MVA costs MCPS.


You do realize that kids experienced health emergencies that required alternative arrangements long before the county decided to start spending $5 million per year on the MVA, right? Those programs will continue to serve these kids as they had been for years before Covid sparked the creation of the MVA.


You do realize it's the year 2024 and most districts throughout the country offer virtual schooling in some capacity,right? Most did pre-pandemic. MoCo is OBSESSED with keeping students stuck in the past. The refusal to evolve here is just amazing/embarrassing.


Again, most virtual options are offered at the STATE level. There’s no reason the state of MD can’t set something up like Virginia has. Virtual programs at the district level are pretty inefficient, even in a large district like MCPS.

With all the other cuts MCPS is proposing, the MVA is way down on my list of things to advocate funding. Sorry.


No, they aren’t. You do realize not all states do districts by county like Maryland does, right? So nah…most places have virtual at the district level. I don’t really care what’s on your personal list to advocate for, I just know you’re stuck in the past. Sad.


DP. Do you have any evidence for this claim?
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Priority needs to be to keep teachers in-person at school. If you want virtual school for your kid, then go private.


You are fooled by MCPS if you think they will have money to keep the teachers after shutting down programs.

Here is what MCEA has shared earlier -

“ payments for contractual services have ballooned by 42% to $100 million in the proposed FY25 budget. These services should be reduced significantly before any cuts to the classroom can be seriously considered. Examples include:

1. $4.5 million in building rental fees (including new executive offices)
2. $1,031,000 in consultant fees (not comprehensive)
3. $850,000 in recycling fees paid to Montgomery County (why doesn't the county just take care of recycling?)
4. $809,717 in outside attorney fees (MCPS has a substantial in-house legal
team.)
5. $525,000 for "random requests that come up and funding is needed"
6. Plus, an additional $13 million in unspecified contractual sevices that MCPS still has not explained”

They didn’t review any of the above but as you may already know teachers will get involuntarily transferred - decisions will be made as of today and process done by end of the week.

It’s obviously BOE/MCPS management problem!!

Plus, please review the actual budget breakdown. Under Other Contractual Services, there are other instructional costs, all miscellaneous but requesting an almost double, 100% increase of 10M totaling over 21M. Is this more questionable than going after this group?

Entrepreneurial ACTIVITIES funds also got similar increase from 6M previous year to totaling over 11M this upcoming year. Is it mandatory and should the “activities” fund taking priority over education for our kids and over the already short staff teachers?

How would putting those MVA kids to private help the disaster happening right now? All families with kids in MCPS are suffering! So are the teachers!!


I agree that the MVA is the first of many cuts the county should be making to the MCPS budget.


Why? ever consider the impact on the kids? Kids needs should come first.


Consider the impact of the cuts they'd have to make if they don't cut MVA.


No impact. $30M is nothing to MCPS and easily eliminated from spending without any impact on classrooms.


Come up an alternative set of $30M in cuts that doesn't involve taking away special education resources and instructional supports.


When they are taking away the MVA, they are taking away special education services for students.

One has nothing to do with the other.


There's at least one MVA supporter here that has been arguing to cancel contracted services that currently provide, among other things, speech therapy to many students in the district.


No one is arguing to cancel speech services but if you were a smart parent you wouldn't exclusively rely on them and also get private.

So, what do you think will happen to these kids who cannot go in person. They will go from a full academic schedule to IIS which is a few hours a week. You think that's ok?


Sounds like you need to take your own advice and go private. I think many will agree that IIS could use improvements. But there are a lot of families in MVA for other reasons that wouldnt even qualify for that. Not sure what camp yours falls into.


ISS could use improvement. They provide a few hours a week of tutoring. That's not an education. Most families cannot afford private. And, it would be near impossible to get a private school spot at this point.


Then your choices are in-person or homeschooling. What's more important to you: your kids' education, or your own anxiety over covid?


Covid is not the concern. You simply don't get it and want to make assumptions about all the students in the MVA.


Not the students. They're not there by choice. The question is why the parents are doing that to them.


Just because your kids wouldn't choose it, doesn't mean other kids wouldn't. You are advocating its closure for your own interests, not the best interests of the students in it. I'm sorry you couldn't make virtual work. It takes a lot of parental involvement. Not all kids are fortunate enough to have involved parents.


My interest lies in identifying programs that are failures and cutting them to free up funds for programs that are working. All available data shows that the NCS is worse at educating kids than in-person schools, especially elementary aged kids and poor kids, and has a much higher rate of chronic absenteeism than in-person school.

Your family seems to be an exception to this objective, broad-based data. But we can’t throw $5M at a program because it works for some people based on whatever standard of “it works” those people have in their minds.

And you’re right. Not all MVA families choose it because of Covid concerns. One prevalent concern I’ve seen from MVA families is with their kid being bullied at in-person school. Which is why I always find it fascinating that some mva supporters routinely resort to personal attacks and bullying of other parents as “too lazy to get the best out of virtual” or “maybe if you spent more time with your kids you wouldn’t be so mean” etc.


You have no data and multiple mcps schools have serious issues so those should also close.


The board discussed the attendance problems, and lower overall test scores. There were also some equity concerns since the program was 35% African American. It’s easier to meet student needs in person.


No it’s not.


Elementary: 28% of MVA students were African American vs 22% county wide in-person

Middle School: 37% MVA vs 22% in-person

High School: 37% MVA vs 22% in person

FARMS:

Elementary: 46% mva vs 42% in-person
Middle: 48% MVA vs 40% in-person
High: 47% MVA vs 37% in-person

White:

Elementary: 11% MVA vs 24%
Middle: 13% MVA vs 26%
High: 18% MVA vs 27%


Is it that surprising? Poor people can least afford to get sick. Maybe if y’all wouldn’t have been so opposed to masking you wouldn’t have forced so many to MVA. SMH.


I’m not sure whether it’s surprising or not but I posted it because a PP lied and said the program was not 35% African American.

Either way, I have a hard time believing that the making habits of school children from 3 years ago are still impacting a meaningful portion of mva program participants. Seems like it’s more about parents who don’t want their kid exposed to in-person school children’s fashion choices or other “distractions” like that.


Also some who like homeschooling in theory but are too lazy to do it themselves.


You are picking and choosing what you want to believe. A child is waiting for an organ transplant in the MVA. Is that not a good enough reason? I don't care what it costs but that child deserves an equal education and we should do what ever it takes to support them. Their life is work way more than the minimal amount the MVA costs MCPS.


You do realize that kids experienced health emergencies that required alternative arrangements long before the county decided to start spending $5 million per year on the MVA, right? Those programs will continue to serve these kids as they had been for years before Covid sparked the creation of the MVA.


You do realize it's the year 2024 and most districts throughout the country offer virtual schooling in some capacity,right? Most did pre-pandemic. MoCo is OBSESSED with keeping students stuck in the past. The refusal to evolve here is just amazing/embarrassing.


Again, most virtual options are offered at the STATE level. There’s no reason the state of MD can’t set something up like Virginia has. Virtual programs at the district level are pretty inefficient, even in a large district like MCPS.

With all the other cuts MCPS is proposing, the MVA is way down on my list of things to advocate funding. Sorry.


No, they aren’t. You do realize not all states do districts by county like Maryland does, right? So nah…most places have virtual at the district level. I don’t really care what’s on your personal list to advocate for, I just know you’re stuck in the past. Sad.


Do all of these districts do virtual learning as poorly as the MVA? Do they all have chronic absenteeism as high as the MVA? Have they all lost 40% if their participants year over year for 2 years in a row because of how bad they are? Have they seen more than two thirds of their original enrollees flee the program?

I’m not sure what you’re advocating here - virtual programming just for the sake of virtual programming regardless of how poorly a job that it does at teaching kids because other districts do it? I’d love to have a virtual program that works. This one doesn’t and it’s particularly bad for poor, young and Black students. Continuing to fund such a disaster of a program because other states do it and do it better doesn’t make sense.
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