Lucy Calkins severely damaged an entire generation’s early reading ability. But even before that, the US Department of Education indirectly supported the "whole language" approach through policies and funding, which promoted it, even though it is now largely discredited for lacking scientific evidence. Luckily, sanity has generally prevailed, and the time-proven method of phonics instruction, has returned. States, influenced by federal initiatives like the No Child Left Behind Act, were encouraged to adopt reading programs that emphasized explicit and systematic instruction in phonics. This shift occurred after research showed "whole language" was less effective and led to a move towards evidence-based reading instruction, often referred to as the "science of reading” despite the U.S. Department of Education having pushed “whole language” for years. |
This is how I feel about a society and country that voted for Trump....ruined and no worries because him and his crooked friends will burn it to the ground. |
Wrong. FCPS is the problem. I've worked in other states and FCPS is the issue not the department of education. |
yup and making the teachers run from the profession like their hair is on fire. |
If you can’t afford to write a check for college, your kid isn’t going. I don’t think folks understand this. They also capped graduate loans. Only wealthy kids are going to med school, law school, and getting MBAs. |
What I’ve noticed as my kids go through FCPS is that your kid needs to be in AAP/honors/AP/IB. Because regular Ed classes are now for remedial students. And I agree that public schools will only be for the poor. Forget special ed students. They are cooked. |
+1 |
Except other than AAP, they will let just about anyone into those other classes. Qualifed or not. Properly behaved or not. |
sure, but all kids in those classes have families or teachers who want them in there (or they want themselves to be in there). It's a filter that is 99 or more % effective. Kids who don't want to work opt for gen ed |
AAP is believed to be elitist and not fair. Principals are adding kids who were not ID'd for the program into classes at centers to even things out. |
This has not been our experience at all. Lots of parents force kids into those classes who can't or won't do the work. Or cheat. Or all of the above. It's hardly a panacea. |
No, that's called 'tracking' and is now considered racist. Everyone must be mixed together. When I was in middle and high school, those who needed more time had study periods built into their schedules. We never knew those kids. Now everyone has a mandatory study period where everyone is mixed together. |
Yes to all of this. Our kids' public middle school put 80% of the kids into honors classes and it was a disaster. The distinction was meaningless as the classes were still basic level and way too easy for even remotely smart kids. There were kids in my children's "honors" English classes that could not read on grade level. The first time my bright kids ever had a challenging class was when they started taking APs in 10th grade. I'm serious. And they aren't geniuses or anything just typical bright kids who did their work. |
|
The Department of Education has, unfortunately, been a failure. The dysfunction and the pursuing of whatever "theory" of the day has made it pretty useless.
The student loan stuff can be sent to other federal agencies. Dept of Ed won't be missed. So now everything becomes about States and what they are doing. 50 states with 50 programs. It's a much more manageable space. |
+100 |