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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Experience with Macfarland?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] Exhibit A reading thru todays post. Definite defensiveness from people with anyone asking about grade level or accelerated classes. Not a good sign. The people repeatedly telling posters to ask the school ad nauseum is also not a good sign. The poster who says they can’t believe everything DCPS admin tells you is correct. Go to an open house and ask about accelerated classes, honors classes and many times you get vague answers, not straightforward. Ask about what is the criteria for these classes and again vague, non-descript answers. The one thing is clear is that there is no accelerated math class from the sole person on here with kid there says his kid is in the accelerated math class and will be taking Algebra in 8th grade. In fact, DCPS is notorious, as someone mentioned, of pushing kids into Algebra who are not even on grade level or ready for it which is true. So I am not confident that it’s even taught on grade level. Any class can be labeled whatever you want. Accelerated does not always mean accelerated and that is a big fact in DCPS.[/quote] OK I'm the parent with a kid in the 7th grade 'accelerated' math class. I can't tell you a ton about it. It's not Algebra. My kid likes the math teacher a lot and has anecdotes to share about him and class that make it sound positive. The kid gets good grades in math. I mean . . . I expect they cover the DCPS curriculum. So this isn't trying to be defensive - a discriminating parent would want to know if they really do more than just normal 7th grade math maybe? I don't go into my kid's class or ask other students how they are doing in class, so I lack direct input from the teacher or longitudinal information regarding other students, i.e., I only hear from my own kid. I expect that's normal and would be impressed by people who know more . . . I guess you can look at public test information, and that probably shows many students not succeeding, which is not a positive for any parent, right, and many here believe that there is some kind of spiral toward success if kids are surrounded by kids succeeding at a peer level on testing. Ahead of PARCC my kid told me that some peers said they don't care about PARCC because it doesn't really count for anything, and you can take that as dispiriting or a clear-eyed understanding of priorities, cf. posts on this forum. So - I don't meant to be overly defensive, but it's hard to be that omniscient informer when you mostly hear about what's going on at school from a remove, based on anecdotes shared by a teenager.[/quote] Thank you for your candid report. How did your kid get placed in the class? For a parent coming in with a 6th grader, how do they decide each kid's class schedule? Honestly I don't really care about PARCC because in most years it doesn't count for anything for the individual student. As my DD said "It's not like they're going to give you candy if you get a 5". I don't know why we would expect a kid to care about a test that isn't connected to any specific outcome.[/quote] Because you teach your kid that it’s important to do your best so you, their teachers, and the school can assess how they are doing compared to their peers in DC Because you as a parent teach your kid that not everything needs to come with a reward. There are things called internal motivation, doing your best no matter what, helping your teachers and school because this is very important to them and is a big factor in their assessment from higher ups. Because it’s just the right thing to do and one lesson that just because you may not care doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it or try your best. IMO, your mentality above does not help to give your daughter the skills that she needs to succeed in the real world. We do lots of things in life, at work, etc.. that isn’t connected to any specific outcomes but it’s the right thing to do.[/quote] Thank you for this condescending lecture! I certainly do teach my DD to work hard at things and to try her best. But I also believe that success requires us to discern and prioritize what is truly important, and the PARCC test does not make the cut. If our city wants parents and kids to prioritize testing, they might consider changing to a test that provides results in less than 6 months so that the information is more useful, and a test that doesn't consume so much instructional time. Many states have dropped PARCC in favor of other tests that are better designed, and I hope that DCPS does the same.[/quote] What exactly is she prioritizing in class at school when kids are taking the test? The information is useful to the teachers and school. My kid took it for the 1st time in 3rd grade this year. It was 1.5 hours in an 8 hour day for 5 days. Not a big deal and feedback was it was easy. Just because you don’t like the test does not mean she should not try your best. But if you want to continue making excuses why majority of kids in this city do so poorly on a test go ahead.[/quote] She took the test, but she did not think it is important, and I don't either so I was fine with that. It's unrealistic to expect a tween to care very much about a test that is long and boring and there's nothing at stake for them. I would expect my DD to care about her school projects where she is learning things or creating something, or at least trying to have a decent GPA for high school applications. PARCC isn't any of those things I don't know which PP you think I am, but I'm not making excuses for poor performance. I simply believe that we should be realistic about what kids that age care about, and that our children would be better served by a test that is adaptive so it takes less time to administer. That time could be better spent teaching and learning. [/quote] LOL! A few hours more spent teaching and learning will absolutely get these kids to grade level and make a huge difference. At least with a standardized test, no matter what test it is, gives you a better picture of where you kid is than the massive grade inflation occurring at DCPS schools.[/quote]
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