Never said they were unworthy but yes, I don’t want my kid in a class full of level 1,2, or 3 kids because we all know what level it will be taught at for the group. |
It's two*, but yes, you're right. Very different. Please keep all of your high performing level 5 kids away from the 456 kids at Deal who scored 1,2,3 on Math PARCC. As well as the 258 kids at Hardy who scored a 1,2,3 on Math PARCC last year. |
Wells has 60% with 1s or 2s. You think that's not a problem or impediment to a high performing kid's growth and success? I don't think PP said their kid shouldn't be around lower performers. I think they suggested that setting below grade level as a goal doesn't help kids. As a parent it would piss me off if a teacher imputed to my kid (or the entire class) that a 3 is good enough. That's the concern. That's where lowered expectations come into play. |
But what teacher said that? Who said that any school was saying that 3s are enough? There are posters who make assumptions that any teacher (or staff member) at any school is saying a 3 is enough and I have never seen that anywhere. |
The high performing kids are in a different class than level 1, 2, or 3 kids at Deal. The overwhelming majority of kids at the school are at or above grade level anywhere from 65-80% plus. Plenty enough to have classes being taught at and above grade level. Funny how you only use numbers to fit your agenda. Why don’t you tell us the number of kids at Deal getting 4’s and 5? It’s way more than your 456 kids you quoted getting below that. Every school has low performing kids but hardly any DCPS non test in high school has any decent cohort of high performing kids. That is the problem in DCPS and it’s culture of low expectations. |
Then you've never been in one of these classrooms. If 60% of kids are at 1 or 2, (1) what level do you think is going to be taught and (2) what realistic goal do you think the teacher will have for the kids? |
DP: so you’re just projecting. FYI, teachers are evaluated based on test scores and student growth, not proficiency. If a student comes in at L3, they will not be rated effective unless they grow to 4/5. |
Are you are teacher? |
Bringing this back to where it was a few pages ago, that dynamic is a much larger problem in DC since the powers that be have decided that tracking kids and advanced classes are against some perverted interpretation of "equity" so all those kids are in the same class. |
One thing this thread taught me is that many people posting have no idea how hard it is to be a teacher and most assume that all the teachers have low expectations. Then, those low expectations teachers are the SOLE reason why there are students not scoring a 4 or a 5.
To the original poster thinking about coming from Baltimore to DC, the grass is not always greener and even in "good" schools, you can have parents like many of the ones posting in this thread. Take that as you want! |
Former admin. DC perverts the concept of equity and fails black kids by infantilizing the community. UMC SJW perpetuate the cycle. Those UMC white kids have resources and opportunities not afforded to the kids they purport to care so much about. |
I have no idea where you got that from. I have seen no replies that suggested any of this was on the teachers. Teachers are being set up to fail. In my last year in education I was written up for defending a teacher who didn't meet growth targets. I asked, "What the hell is the teacher supposed to do with a class of 75% 2 or more grade levels behind? She's got no assistant and can only teach one lesson at once?" |
Are you the former admin who just posted? Pretty sure you said that DC has a culture of low expectations. How does that not include the teachers from what you said? Where is this culture of low expectations from based on what at least 10 posters have said (if not more)? Sorry, I am not going back to count. |
at wells, for example, 20% of children are classified as special education, 1/3 are ELL, and 1/2 are at-risk. at hardy and deal, these categories are all closer to 10%. at basis (which pushes poorly performing kids out), these populations are all negligible. its too simplistic to straight up compare the test scores for wells to the other schools. |
And here comes the WTU to make this all about them. It may be Thanksgiving but they always have their cross to climb onto. |