How do you keep teachers from scolding your kids for not doing their homework? |
https://grammarist.com/idiom/phone-it-in/ |
I don’t believe the average high schooler doesn’t know what a noun is. It is the easiest part of the sentence. A person, place or thing. Your cousin obviously uses proper sentence structure, she was after all hired by a company that only hires brilliant people. She must have forgot the word. It’s the most basic of grammar terms but I get it. I can never remember the definition of adverb but I use adverbs. Name one school that doesn’t teach the definitions of nouns, proper nouns that are capitalized, adjectives, etc. |
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RVA suburban public school.
Early elementary (K-2) -- now more than 10 years ago -- was excellent. Youngest is now a senior and, of the seven different teachers both DCs had at the HS level, only one was awful (to the point he was 'reassigned' the very next year). The others were all above average or downright excellent. These were all honors or dual-enrollment offerings. It was VERY disappointing during grades 3-7, probably when they might have needed it the most. Oddly enough, they did enough 'writing' in other classes, with teachers who did grade for grammar, spelling, and composition, that they muddled through. We also added on when/where we could. We were disgusted with the lack of any effort to actually increase vocabulary. But I kinda get it; there are sooooo many kids who aren't even at grade-level that that's where teachers and resources go. Not saying it's right, just that it's so. |
While I'll agree that the average HS student knows what a noun "is," knowing how to identify it in a sentence and using proper subject/verb agreement can be sketchy. I'm a PP and our DC now volunteers/tutors in a Writing Center established by one of those excellent teachers and even she is shocked at who comes in and just how much help they actually need. They are hooked on tools like spell-checkers, Grammarly, and ChatGPT. Don't get me wrong. I'm all for using those tools once you know how to do it yourself and evaluate the tool's response. What also makes me sad is how poorly the kids even speak. Pronunciation and diction are fast becoming lost arts or get you called out for acting white or being uppity. |
I believe it. In my teens 9th grade honors English, the teacher specifically wrote in the syllabus all sentences were required to have capitalization and punctuation. She then had to (re)teach the class how to use capitalization and end punctuation. |
| In private and happy as MS student reads literature for class, has been taught annotation skills, regularly writes essays, and is learning grammar in multiple languages. She reads independently on her own a lot and many of her peers do too. We still go to the library or bookstore on weekends as a family activity. This is a habit we have reinforced since she was young and will continue to do. |
| For the people who say they fight screenbased work… how, exactly? You just tell the teacher any screen based homework won’t be completed? Demand that in-class work be done on paper when all the other kids are on the iPad? I fought this fight for awhile and ended up just switching to private school. |
No. We are in FCPS and it has been horrible for all the years we have been here, They are not teaching writing. They expect the kids to know how to write by HS I'm assuming by osmosis. |
Why can’t he read fun novels at home? Our kids read full books starting in 2nd grade. That’s when they all start to read the same book. |
| No. APS. |
Almost all the people who complain about classes all seem to have kids in advanced classes. Are you doubting these classes are advanced? And my 7th grader doesn’t have Instagram along with quite a few classmates. That’s an odd request |
| The top students at private, charter, and public middle schools that my DD is friends with in DC do read on their own. Most of these kids were taken to the library when young and their parents continue to encourage reading as well as limit screens. Our observation: DCPS focuses a lot less on reading and writing than privates or many charters do during the middle school years. |
That's because it's not "advanced English." Advanced English is the default English--and what most kids take, except for some English language learners. My kid writes a lot in HIGH which is cohorted social studies. |
That describes parents and kids from all levels academically. Reading a book at home and reading the same book as 20 kids who will discuss and write about it are not equal. Middle schools could always handle all of the basic subjects, I wonder what happened. |