Anonymous wrote:Compacted math has nothing to do with CES placement, math scores are not considered for CES placement. My kid was placed in the lottery for the CES and did not get a spot. They are getting zero enrichment at their home school, and in fact my kid’s 20 year old brand new teacher professed ignorance that there was even an option for enrichment. Good times.
Anonymous wrote:When DC was in CES they read one book a month that had a Lexile level of over 1000. THey often wrote papers which were 500-1000. I doubt anything like that is going on at any homeschool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some schools offer the enriched literacy curriculum, which is the closest MCPS offers to CES. ELC places kids in an all-enriched classroom, so they do not receive any Benchmark materials. Unfortunately, our school does not have this, and the Enriched Benchmark Curriculum (which all schools offer) is not nearly as good. Kids who need enriched content are supposed to receive it through their reading groups, meaning that most of their time is spent on Benchmark. The enriched content is optional and requires schools to opt-into purchasing expensive materials for used by the enriched reading group.
My child was in the lottery last year but did not get a spot at the CES and has been supposedly receiving enrichment in ELA, but he reports that class is just as easy as last year and that he is bored.
MCPS should be offering ELC at all schools, but it does not sound like there is any commitment to doing so, unfortunately.
I don't understand why some schools get ELC and some don't. All schools should have ELC!
Anonymous wrote:Zero enrichment beyond compacted math.
Anonymous wrote:Some schools offer the enriched literacy curriculum, which is the closest MCPS offers to CES. ELC places kids in an all-enriched classroom, so they do not receive any Benchmark materials. Unfortunately, our school does not have this, and the Enriched Benchmark Curriculum (which all schools offer) is not nearly as good. Kids who need enriched content are supposed to receive it through their reading groups, meaning that most of their time is spent on Benchmark. The enriched content is optional and requires schools to opt-into purchasing expensive materials for used by the enriched reading group.
My child was in the lottery last year but did not get a spot at the CES and has been supposedly receiving enrichment in ELA, but he reports that class is just as easy as last year and that he is bored.
MCPS should be offering ELC at all schools, but it does not sound like there is any commitment to doing so, unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:What kind of enrichment is your child receiving at their local school? It feels like other than being placed in compacted math, there is no other enrichment being offered? It feels very separate but not equal to me.