Now it’s clear that you’re just lazy. Sorry mcps can’t read your mind or do your parenting for you. The system is not perfect, sure, but you’re being ridiculous. |
My 8th grader is among the first class of kids to be subjected to 2.0 from 1st grade. It remains to be seen if she is well prepared. I feel like she has been held back by this curriculum and is capable of doing so much more. I have been deeply disappointed by 2.0. It stinks! My other kids who went through MCPS before 2.0 was implemented received very good educations and are top performers at their colleges. I am not sure that MCPS helped make them top performers or if they would be anyway. I do feel, though, that they are well-prepared for college. |
It strikes me, anecdotally from reading DCUM, that the people who paid the highest "good schools" surcharge (by living in the Bethesda/Potomac area) complain the most about the awfulness of those schools. Maybe the "good schools" surcharge is a bad buy. |
I'm starting to believe it as well. I have a friend who has a kid at a Bethesda ES.. miserable. Then we have a bunch of W parents who complain here. I'm pretty happy with our Focus school in Gaithersburg with a FARMS rate of 40%. Very little complaints and I'm happy with the education that my kids are getting. I'm really confused. Parents here are complaining that their kids are not getting the appropriate leveled instruction- it's like a different system entirely because that has not been our experience at all. And I'm one of those very involved parents who care a lot about my kids' education. I'm wondering if it's the class sizes? |
I have two kids 8yrs apart and I can assure you the only goal of ES is to bring up the rear. My oldest was in tracked math classes accelerated 2 years with same like peers. They were doing group projects, progressive analytical thinking, and being taught as a whole class. My youngest is in the 2.0 mixed setting and her high math group meets on average 2-3x less than the lowest math group each week. They are given busy worksheets and then sit and read books once they are done. Oh wait, they are constantly asked to help others kids not in the teacher's group who are so lost in math. Like mini teacher's aids. But wait, the kids don't even understand English. Now my daughter tries to interpret. She and her peers can't even read their darn book. No learning for you! This is not just me. It is across the board. Mixed classes with selective small groups always take the lowest groups the most and the higher groups are left with 75min of zero direct teaching and boring worksheets. This year in 3rd my daughter may meet once a week in a small group. That is it. The teacher asks her to do Khan academy on chromebook sometimes. It's pathetic. |
My kid is in compacted math and is in an entirely separate classroom. Math is absolutely differentiated in our school. So is reading.. |
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My 6th grader is in a math class with 7th and 8th graders. Sorry your kid didn't make the cut.
No extra support here, and we are quite happy with how MCPS has moved her up. |
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If parents have to supplement, it means that MCPS is indeed failing.
If MCPS teachers are using Khan Academy in the classroom, MCPS is indeed failing. If your child is bored in the classroom, MCPS is indeed failing. If your child can't do their homework without help, MCPS is failing. If your child is doing busy work on his fancy new Chromebook, MCPS is failing. |
Really? If my kid is bored in class, the whole school system is failing? I will have to tell my kid to never be bored in class. The stakes are too high! (I'm not perceiving a meaningful difference between using Khan Academy in the classroom and using a textbook in the classroom, by the way.) |
Kids are bored in class because MCPS doesn't challenge them. I hear this from so many parents these days, particularly in "W" elementary schools. It's absolutely a failure of the system. |
I think it’s okay for kids to feel bored. They have to find something to do. School should not be entertainment despite what people think. Each your kids to speak up and find ways to challenge themselves. Teach them to to find a problem and think about ways to solve it. Teach them not to wait for things to be handed to them. Busy work and technology use are relative too. I think people get overexcited about fancy gadgets in the classroom and it can be distracting, but I also think how effective it is is not just about the curriculum or the teacher. I also think kids should do homework wth minimal or no help. That’s up the parent to follow through upon. Don’t helicopter and correct things and expect perfection in homework. The teacher needs to know where the child is struggling and how much s/he can accomplish. |
Parents in Bethesda have very high expectations. Not saying that parents in Gaithersburg don't, but it is evident in Bethesda by the complaints you say you have noticed. |
| ^ teacher |
amen. what a waste of the potential learnings of a young child and young adult. |
Has she been with older kids since elementary school? How did you get MCPS to move her up-- or did they do so on their own initiative without prompting? Curious to know and am not criticizing. |