
Departmentalization is by principal discretion. This is not coming from Gatehouse. They are doing this to attract teachers. Grades 4-6 are the hardest to staff in ES and it is easier for teachers to plan for 1-2 subjects vs all. |
+ a million This is common sense and so straightforward. It really does boggle the mind that FCPS sees fit to divide the kids in this way. You’re totally correct about the vast overlap. |
DP. With flexible grouping - which is what I had growing up (in FCPS, no less), each teacher took a different subject and level. So kids were never in *one* classroom. We switched for math, LA, science, and SS. And each level was taken over by a different teacher. So kids who might be advanced in one subject but not all, could go to exactly the classrooms that me those levels. Sure, some kids were in all advanced classes, but we were all switching, so there was no one teacher who only one level. This is what they need to return to. And a very tiny GT program for those who truly exceed everyone else. |
This is pretty much what they already do - the kids are always switching for specials anyway. I would fight very hard for this system, as it ensures every kid is [b]actually met where they are, instead of the hollow lip service FCPS currently touts. DP |
Excellent. |
+100 This is exactly what we had growing up and it worked great. I was an advanced LA kid but needed more help in math. So I went to the advanced LA class and then to the grade-level math class. There was a GT program that took a handful of kids from each school. 99% of the other kids just circulated in the different groups and moved up (or down) as needed, whenever needed. No one had to wait a YEAR to see if some test would give them access to a moderately accelerated curriculum in any subject. It was just there, for anyone who was able to do it. The current system has complicated everything, in addition to excluding bright kids who would thrive with more advanced work. It’s disgraceful that a curriculum which is not even a “gifted” one, has been gate-kept from all of these other highly capable kids. A test score doesn’t determine who can do the work. |
+1 Makes a lot more sense, too. |
This sounds like the Lake Wobegon attitude straight from the Langley pyramid where all the kids are above average and special offense may be taken to not having a kid in AAP. In many other parts of the county there is a huge disparity in student readiness and getting rid of AAP will just send families out of FCPS. |
Interesting, it is like we can’t even get to a good answer because people are just bringing back “when I was in school”. How did the kids not know you were dumb in math? or smart in social studies? Did you think that helped you, or that you were immune because you could say you were smart in LA? It is like humanity can’t make progress because people can’t think beyond “when I was in school”. |
DP. It's just an example of a way to 'meet kids where they are at'. In the current system my kids teacher told me that based on fall iready score she wouldn't be teaching kid anything until February ( half the school year!!) and that kid should really be getting the faster curriculum that was happening in the class right next door, but also oh well there's nothing we can do about it. The current system doesn't work for kids like my kid. |
It’s really something that you can’t seem to grasp - making AAP available to any student interested and able (as honors and AP classes are) isn’t “getting rid of it.” In fact, quite the opposite - it’s expanding access to ALL kids. But understandable that you’d prefer for it to be exclusive. |
Um, no one cared because most of the kids were also advanced in some subjects but not in all. Or “dumb,” as you so charmingly put it - so telling. And of course that system helped us. Everyone had access to the appropriate level per subject. |
Every parent will insist their child should be in the advanced class, to get away from the ESOL kids and others slowing the class down if nothing else. That is what the tests are for. Prove it. |
Prove what? That many more kids are perfectly capable of advanced work, and that all should be afforded the opportunity to try? If it doesn’t work out, there would obviously be a lower group to easily drop into. Allowing more access, rather than less, is not the calamity you want to pretend it is. |
This grouping nonsense is never gonna happen with 40% FARMs and 10-15 ESOL and mainstreaming. Sorry, 1990s FCPS is just a memory that exists in a small sample of privileged enclaves. |