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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "I fear for the future of Einstein."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I'm not the MVC poster but the point Iran's MVc. The point is MCPS investing enough in ALL the schools and being able to offer rigorous courses to kids who want and need them so they don't need to go to a "good school". They should be able to go to their home school and get and equivalent educational opportunity anywhere in the county! [/quote] I do not disagree that it's a good point. But the frequency with which that poster brings it up (and her deceptive language claiming that kids can't meet the math graduation requirements at Einstein, which can actively confuse people who don't know who she is and what she's really saying, as if taking Calc AB and/or AP Stats is somehow impossible rather than just not ideal and, yes, not equitable) is incredibly frustrating.[/quote] You don't need to take AB, and you are still missing a year of math. How can you not understand the math courses? Kid will take Calc BC and Statistics but that still leaves a year of math missing.[/quote] Even if you take Algebra 1 in 6th (which is 3 years early and not anything you should expect the system to bend over backwards to accommodate), you can still take Pre-calc and then Calc AB + Calc BC + AP Stats in high school and have enough math to graduate and look perfectly fine on competitive college applications (where they do not expect kids from schools without MVC to take MVC.) No, it's not fair that kids in richer schools have other options, but it works. Complaining about it to us for the 10 millionth time will not help you or anyone, and your inflammatory framing is actively confusing people. It's not okay to keep saying your kid won't be able to graduate when you mean "my kid will have to take a set of classes that aren't my top preference." .Enough already. If you cannot bring yourself to stop this, please just step away from DCUM for awhile. If you really care about this, take your advocacy somewhere it could actually make a difference, like the Board of Ed or the MCPS math department. (But using the "my kid won't be able to graduate because Einstein doesn't have enough math" language won't help you there either. Just talk about how it's not fair/equitable.)[/quote] Again, if your school has it, why shouldn't all schools? And, why would you take AB and BC? [/quote] Because there isn't enough demand at all schools and it would be incredibly shortsighted and wasteful to allocate resources like that in such a way. What's so hard to understand?[/quote] Or maybe the principal prefers kids to take an easier sequence so kids get better grades to make the school look better [/quote] Sure. It's a conspiracy with the principal. Do you hear yourself? The average student doesn't need to take this level of mathematics. It's just not necessary and the demand isn't there. As I've seen written elsewhere, do all schools allocate the same resources for emerging English learners or ESOL? No, no, they don't. I wonder why that is?[/quote] The principal could add it but chooses not to. One of the VPs does not support ap classes so it’s hard to say if it’s the principal, or this one ap or both. They have at least two qualified teachers with degrees. [/quote]
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