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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Jefferson Middle School Academy"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Also, although DCPS already provides algebra at almost every middle school currently, it will do so in EVERY school with middle grades, whether it be a stand alone middle school or an education campus starting this coming school year. In addition to that, at 3 middle schools, where the majority of "advanced" middle school DCPS students are located (Deal, Stuart-Hobson, and Hardy), geometry is offered in 8th grade and algebra in 7th grade. This is a practice that is spreading in DCPS. So I don't agree that DCPS ignores the needs of advanced students--almost every "gifted" math student, who can take algebra in 7th grade, geometry in 8th grade, can end up taking 2 full years worth of either AP Calculus (AB and BC) or AP Statistics, or join in one of the DCPS dual college enrollment programs for their final two years of high school. I fail to see, as a DCPS employee, how that is NOT meeting the needs of advanced students. Should geometry be offered in more middle schools beyond Deal, Hardy, and Stuart-Hobson? Yes, and I have no doubt that it will. [/quote] Your own words disprove your premise because you're acknowledging that math is the only advanced course offered by some middle schools. If an entire school day were a sandwich, kids getting a piece of lettuce on their plates would be good enough, according to you. Me, I'd want my kid (assuming he's hungry) to be provided the full sandwich, or at least some bread with meat, cheese and mayonnaise. Why won't DCPS provide them with the whole sandwich? Just lettuce isn't good enough.[/quote] This was the first example, and because math works best with an acceleration approach. Your child can get his/her "sandwich", Miss Hungry Hungry Hippo--both Stuart Hobson and Hardy offer Honors courses, Deal has a strong IB program and then in the DCPS high schools almost everyone offers at least 15 AP courses. Wilson and School Without Walls each offers 20+ AP courses. All DCPS high schools have dual enrollment college agreements as well, if they want to go that route. Snack on that, hon.[/quote]
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