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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Only 57% of MCPS students proficient in reading, 36% proficient in math"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I’ve said it before I’ll say it again without Bethesda Potomac and parts of Rockville mcps is a mediocre school system in its current form I wouldn’t be surprised if the stats tumbled even more if those areas of the county did not exist or have the demographics they have[/quote] That's nothing new. People have always been saying that school performance correlates with SES, which unfortunately correlates with race around here. One issue I have is that people around here forget that there are many up and coming areas both within MCPS and outside that are just as good or better than established school areas in MCPS. For example, the overall Math proficiency rate for Snowden Farm in Clarksburg is 62.5%. Spark Matsunaga 73.6 percent. Compared to like Ashburton at 66.5 percent or Beverly Farms at 76.9 percent. That's not far off right? So it's not just the areas you listed that "carries" MCPS. The differential between high and lower performing schools might've not been as big of an issue before, where people stayed in their own islands. But MCPS is doing a lot of things where they're not only accommodating the lower performing groups but also taking away from the higher performing ones. Such as slowing down/limiting curriculum, taking away advanced pathways, etc I don't have issues with them trying to address the lower performing groups. It's what should be done and has been happening. Such as families get free preK, innovative school (full year), title I, Focus school, they had priority in summer school the last several years, etc. These is all things I would've liked for my family but am okay that we didn't get it. But again the issue for me is when they start limiting or taking away from the higher performing groups. The problem is that they need to find a way to improve the lower performing schools and groups. Do you have any ideas for that?[/quote] Thanks for the reply! I’m the pp for that comment. I think that free tutoring for kids that goes over all subjects almost like a college learning center could be great so that way kids can attend after school or before but it also does not feel like special ed so kids won’t feel like there is a stigma. However I feel this goes beyond test scores part of the reason I moved my oldest out of MCPS in 2023 to a catholic high school was due to all the fights and bad groundskeeping while I understand this is an issue everywhere we shouldn’t sweep it under the rug for my youngest (class of 2032) I might move to another cluster after my oldest graduates however even that one seems to have faulty groundskeeping in the high school. My point is that while test scores are great there are still things that many families especially middle to upper middle class families value if someone has a choice no matter test scores they don’t want to send Their kid to a school with multiple fights a day and bad maintenance.[/quote] Yeap I agree. My family wasn't rich but reached to live in an expensive school district. So my parents made the mistake of thinking that they could just drop me and my siblings at the school and we'd automatically be along the rest of the cohorts. Didn't really work that way and had no one telling us to do homework at home. So I appreciated it when our school identified students for afterschool homework sessions, where they had teachers, parents, other students volunteer time to make sure we did our homework and helped us where we needed it. Unfortunately for me, it was too late by then. But I recognize and appreciate what they tried to do now. Yes and discipline is a big deal. If they can enforce discipline it can lead to a positive learning environment for kids to learn. What was the first thing that Morgan Freeman's character did in the film Lean on Me? Expel all the troublemakers that took away from the school environment. I'm not saying MCPS should do that off the bat. But show that they're serious about enforcing discipline. And families and students that care will make sure they behave. And this is out of the school system's hands. But Montgomery County really needs to stop building so much housing, which leads to overcrowded schools. And try to find ways to bring companies and jobs into the county for other forms of revenue other than property taxes.[/quote]
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