I don’t get arguing that it is the job of a public school system to keep hoarding all the best opportunities for the top 0.1%. |
I don't arguing that is the job of the veterinarian to keep hoarding all the dogfood for the dogs. It's not "hoarding" to match students to good-fit classes that wouldn't be good fits for other students. |
Definitely not. But we have finite resources and we cannot continue to prioritize the best fit for the tiniest group of high achievers while overlooking the needs of large numbers of others. |
that opportunity is open to 100% of kids. |
The so-ridiculous-it's-not-even-wrong-it's-just-crazy bit "deliver research analysis within a few weeks that typically takes a PhD student several months to complete" ruined what otherwise would have been passable. But the whole comment is suspect now. |
No one defending the magnets is saying other students don't deserve fits. What we're opposed to is giving bad fits to the top performers in order to lower their performance to a more "equitable" level, or using them as propaganda props to bring up the average score of groups they are dropped into but not actually improving the performance of the others, or making them give up class time to be unpaid, unacknowledged tutors. |
The only program that serves 0.1% of all the high school students in MCPS is the Leadership Training Institute at Kennedy. The next two smallest programs are the Biomedical and Engineering programs at Wheaton, which each serve 0.2% of the high school population. These programs are so small because they’re part of the Down County Consortium, which is made up of only 5 high schools, so the vast majority of MCPS’s high school students aren’t elegible to attend. Why are you trying to make it seem like almost no one is enrolled in these programs? |
Again … this plan will not lead to increased acceleration. It will reduce it and will destroy the top program in the process. |
That was a direct response to the PP who said the Blair magnet served her 99.9% child and even her 99% kid wasn’t smart enough. |
Agreed. |
I doubt that some of these schools have 30 kids who want to take or capable of taking mvc, not to mention that MCPS would have a hard time finding qualified mvc teachers for the six regions. No, mcps cannot create equal programming. |
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I wonder if they can have a few teachers travel between schools to teach the highest level classes, instead of transporting all the kids to just a couple schools. |
+1 Agreed. There's no reason to target only the 1% and have nothing for the remaining the 99%. And that's assuming MCPS is even identifying which group of kids are the 1%, which they're probably not, since all they're looking at is MAP test scores which only test exposure and is fairly easy to game by a smart kid with some prep. |
PP here. I myself is a university professor, and have supervised a half dozen of PhD students and mentored a dozen HS interns. I'm not comparing them to MIT PhD students, but just comparing them to students in my department. These high schoolers (Blair, TJ, Poolsville) are much better at learning and implementing an idea than new PhD students. Many of them later earned ISEF/Regeneron semi-finalists or published papers before entering college. Go attend a few MCPS science fair or FCPS science fair, you can quickly find that their projects are at a completely different level. I appreciate MCPS and FCPS in providing the educations, peer groups and teaching resources to help them be so advanced and prepared for directly diving into research. It's just my fortune that one of my kids is one of them, and it's going to be a loss to let this type of students die in solitary and not-learning-at-all during K-12. I'm also proud and happy for my 99% kid that they can learn somewhat, from which I see some value in the expansion to regional programs. What I originally wanted to emphasize is that current SMACS curriculum is not suited for 90% kid at all. Tremendous watering down is needed (e.g., chopping off all junior and senior selectives) before suiting their needs, but to do this at the expense of butchering the current SMACS program is like a suicidal move for MCPS. |