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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Bethesda Today gives Josh Starr several quotes while downplaying MCEA, MCCPTA and petitions with 100s of signatures"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote]Most students at Montgomery College are required to complete one or more developmental courses before they can enroll in college-level courses required for a degree.[b] In 2011, 73 percent of all students new to the college required remediation in math and 29 to 35 percent required remediation in English or reading. [/b]Across subject areas, remediation rates were higher for recent high school graduates than for older ones and among Black and Latino students compared to White and Asian students.[/quote] Yes, this is old data. No, there is literally no reason to believe this has gotten any better, and many reasons to believe it has gotten worse. https://www2.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcgportalapps/Press_Detail.aspx?Item_ID=12275&Dept=1#:~:text=Most%20students%20at%20Montgomery%20College,to%20White%20and%20Asian%20students.[/quote] Y'all not too bright [/quote] You don't care that in 2011 three quarters of students at Montgomery College had to take remedial math? Why? Is it because you are so above community college? Or because you practice magical thinking and think math proficiency has increased since then?[/quote] Usually students go to MC as they cannot afford college or are not ready. That's not surprising at all. MC is not a good data source.[/quote] About 1 in 5 MCPS students enroll in Montgomery College. These are high school graduates. Why is MCPS graduating kids who can't pass a basic math exam? [/quote] Most are low income or special needs. [/quote] This is a terrible and offensive excuse for granting high school diplomas to college bound kids who aren't ready for college.[/quote] Mc has trade programs. Not everyone can handle a four year college. Get out of your bubble. [/quote] They should be able to handle basic math if they have a high school degree. Tradespeople need to be able to do math maybe even more than other professions[/quote] Be thankful you don't have a special needs kid as you clearly have no clue about anything outside of your bubble.[/quote] I have a special needs kid you dufus. My kid deserves an education and to be able to meet standards.[/quote] Grown ups don't name call and there are lots of different special needs with different educational impacts. Not all kids can meet the standard, sadly.[/quote] We're talking about kids earned high school diplomas and enrolled in college. [b]They shouldn't have to take remedial math in college if they earned a high school diploma. [/b]You can't blame the kids for being too poor or having special needs. That's disgusting.[/quote] What the hell are you talking about. Even at Harvard, there are lots of kids taking remedial math classes. [/quote] I don't think Harvard's remedial math equates to MC's remedial math, but you be the judge: https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2024/9/3/new-math-intro-course/[/quote] Same. It's still remedial [/quote] I'm the first PP above. I'm not following. Is this supposed to mean K-12 math education is on the right track? Seems to me that our schools are not effectively preparing many kids for college. And we're all sending our kids to these schools. Not surprising to see low IB math scores in most MCPS IB programs except the most selective one.[/quote] Yep, and there is no plan to address low outcomes in these IB programs.[/quote] The only IB program with "low outcomes" is Kennedy. Not sure what you're talking about. [/quote] No, other IB schools have low graduation rates. [/quote]
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