Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious where the $40/hr is coming in. I thought that intensive tutoring was supposed to be one of the major components of the American Recovery Plan funding.
$40/hr (give or take a few dollars?) is the “admin premium” rate for DCPS teachers who do approved work beyond contract hours. So if a teacher does the after school tutoring programs that’s the rate they are paid. That’s set by DCPS but the funds probably come from the recovery plan.
Anonymous wrote:I’m curious where the $40/hr is coming in. I thought that intensive tutoring was supposed to be one of the major components of the American Recovery Plan funding.
Anonymous wrote:I wish my school had this! My kid is so far behind and I’m tired of the movie and TV time in aftercare. C’mon already! They seem to be struggling with basics due to staffing issues, much less helping kids who need it in extra hours. I have found offsite support and paying a ton.
Anonymous wrote:I considered doing it at my school, but when I realized it would look more like an extended day, no 1:1 interventions (because there weren't enough teachers) and most of the time students would be on computers it wasn't worth the $40.
Another promising opportunity DCPS kicked to already overworked teachers and administrations just to say "we did it." Any data that DCPS spits out will be # of students served and completely meaningless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS talked a lot about using "High-dosage tutoring" and "Acceleration Academies" to make up for the learning loss from COVID closures last year. Does anyone have any info on whether these have actually been done in a widespread way, and if it has been actually successful in getting DCPS kids on track?
The reality is that DCPS is all talk and poor organization and implementation. The learning loss data, especially for the lower performing kids, is really bad. It’s actually worst than what they found because some kids did not participate who never do DL. Many of these kids will never catch up and be even further behind.
If you thought the achievement gap was bad before Covid, it’s going to be much, much worst now.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS talked a lot about using "High-dosage tutoring" and "Acceleration Academies" to make up for the learning loss from COVID closures last year. Does anyone have any info on whether these have actually been done in a widespread way, and if it has been actually successful in getting DCPS kids on track?