Schools barely teach anymore. If a child is not reading by 1st, personally I'd have them tested for a reading disorder. Mine thankfully were early readers but we did mroe than just read 15 minutes a day. |
Many of our kids are not in schools like yours and are in lower preforming schools. Parental involvement is important. |
Seriously. How TF do we get the MCAP scores? Apparently they exist. |
I've been in elementary education for 22 years and here's my take on why kids are performing so poorly...
1) We haven't been teaching using the research behind the science of reading until very recently. As a country, we've spent decades teaching kids to read incorrectly despite there being 40+ years of scientific research to prove how to do it correctly. For whatever reason, school systems across America banded together and adopted the "balanced literacy approach" which is not how kids learn to read. 2) The Common Core State Standards are just too rigorous and developmentally inappropriate for the primary grades. Teachers have to shove so much content into kids because the bar is so high. There's no time to build a solid foundation in the basics before layering in harder concepts. So for the younger kids, we're basically trying to build a sand castle at high tide. 3) The assessments are ridiculously tough. I believe kids can do very hard things but since we're so test-driven, we don't let kids learn and demonstrate their understanding in ways that capitalize on all of their unique strengths. Multiple-choice and written response questions don't capture the genius of all of our awesome kids. 4) Our society has changed. I help get kids in the cars every afternoon during dismissal and I'm always saddened to see how many parents barely acknowledge their kids as they get in the car because they're so engrossed in their cell phones. I have caught myself a time or two on my phone and not giving my own kids my undivided attention but I think we underestimate how much screen time has had an impact on our kids overall development. |
Email Donna Blaney and stay on her u til she releases the scores. Like follow up each day with a call and email. She will do her best to ignore you. BLANEY, MRS. DONNA (DONNA) M Supervisor, Testing and Reporting Unit 240-740-2947 Donna_M_Blaney@mcpsmd.org |
Common core standards are fine. Many parents are working from home. My spouse takes calls in the car to pick up our kids as there is no mcps bus. What other option is there? You assume parents don’t spend time with their kids based off that? |
Mcps always hides data. |
+1 |
At least MCPS isn’t as bad as the Baltimore city school system. |
Common core standards were developed specifically to counter the effects of unearned white privilege. |
Given that there was zero lift in academic outcomes for black and brown students, then Common Core failed in its mission. |
I just wanted to add because it doesn't appear anyone posted it, but we did some analysis on the various MCPS demographics and subjects from this MCAP report
https://moderatelymoco.com/mcps-hispanic-economically-disadvantaged-students-in-bottom-half-of-state-while-disabled-black-african-american-learners-shine-latest-testing-results/ Here were the notable conclusions when compared to the rest of the state: Needs Improvement Two areas stand out in the MCAP results as needing the most improvement compared to other Maryland counties. The first is Hispanic/Latino Students where MCPS averaged a state ranking of 14.9 (in the bottom half of all counties for nearly every subject and grade level) and an average proficiency score of 20.46% The second is Economically Disadvantaged Students who averaged a state ranking of 12.8 (in the bottom half of all counties for all but 3 subjects and grade levels) and an average proficiency score of 21.03 Bright Spots There are some bright spots worth mentioning. Black / African American students in MCPS on average ranked 4.1 amongst county’s Black / African American populations with a 30.09% proficiency. Students with Disabilities had MCPS’s best rankings with on average a 1.9 ranking and 15.44% proficiency. While these last two don’t necessarily reflect great proficiencies, they do show some strengths of MCPS compared to other Maryland counties and are higher than MCPS overall rankings. We also did an update to previous pieces on the 2024 MCPS MCAP data for Geometry compared to other recent years: https://moderatelymoco.com/mcps-middle-school-geometry-testing-2024-updates/ |
I want a more nuanced breakdown by racial and economic demographics. I don't see how this bulk average for any diverse area is all that meaningful. |
So impressive!! Congrats MCPS! |
Won't common core go away with the Dept of Ed? |