| I’d rather they cut more trees (give paper homework) instead of 5 hours of daily laptop homework for my 5th grader in Fcps. |
name? There are a lot of things I appreciate about my kid’s DCPS MS but if I knew then what I know now, I absolutely would have tried to get into that charter. the only caveat is that I think it’s a good idea to get the kids writing on computers by MS, and they do need to learn how to research online. But the “ed tech” apps need to die a slow painful death. |
I am sorry to say that you need to be more vigilant about math. The apps really, really suck. And just because your child is working ahead on the app does not at all mean that he actually is learning the fundamentals the way he needs to be. |
I will second this. The apps don't encourage deep knowledge and spend too much time training kids on how to answer the questions as presented in the app. They aren't getting 365 knowledge. The Beast Academy books are good if you are looking for engaging material to supplement or move your kid further along than what they are doing in the curriculum. |
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It’s so disturbing - all the tech.
Even PEP (the preschool in mcps) uses Promethean boards. Instead of singing in a circle, making eye contact with one another - they sing along to YouTube. Nothing tactile for the “weather report” - instead they drag their wand on a screen. Waiting outside ES classrooms in morning before first bell- no chit chat, no games - children on chromebooks. Civilization is doomed. |
Agree! I remember when the American Academy of Pediatricians had screentime guidelines per kids ages. Now, you've got 5 yr olds on screens all day and no one says a word about it. I feel so sorry for these kids today. Their parents just let them melt their brains so they don't have to raise them. I even feel sorry for the little ones at Costco in the cart watching mommy's phone instead of looking around at all the stuff, running the aisles, heck even whining and crying is a better use of their time. Moved my kid to tech -free school after seeing how the screens all day ruined my older one's education. Lesson learned. The smart kids / good students may navigate it but what opportunities are lost!? And the poor students - well, they are seriously underserved with the screens in the classroom. The window to impart skills for these ones (usually the boys!) will be closed by high school and some may be forever doomed and uneducated. Way to go EdTech! You got scammed America. |
+1 a grown adult now would have missed the high tech elementary school era. A 2000s elementary school would have been a shared laptop cart or a computer lab shared by the school. Early Gen Z born in the late 90s and early 2000s received that experience, at least in the elementary school years. |
I am pro Luddite. Bring back good ole reading and writing. My kid's high school is doing more and more assignments old school (pen and paper) and I think it's fantastic. |
+1000 I see our not-fancy private high school issuing textbooks in all classes and laptops only used for submitting homework. No laptop use in class. The EdTech experiment is dying in privates. |
| It is funny that only the wealthy will be able to access tech free education. So ridiculous that we need to pay to have less of it. Ed tech has really fooled the masses. |
This is at least reasonable. I’d still love to see plenty of handwritten work in MS and HS. (This will become more important to prove you didn’t use AI.) I sell tech and I want my kids far from it. Not because tech has no value at all, but because it does *not* improve education. I have heard the ed sellers talk about needing to lock in kids’ brand preferences as early as possible because they are the customers of the future. No thanks. |
There are plenty of ways to cheat without ai. |
Moderation. I allowed educational videos and apps. It helped with early reading. It’s a tool. |
Yeah, we know. What’s your point |
Per the article, they, result in worse reading skills and dumber kids. It’s not a tool that’s helping |