Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah MCPS….the three billion dollar gang that can’t shoot straight. Shocked they didn’t simply offer the tutors free eye and dental - they would have plenty of folks. Hell they paid bus drivers to sit at home during pandemic - many of whom simply left when economy turned and MCPS was caught flat footed for all their ‘generosity’. Such a laughingstock.
Many of the bus drivers were working.
Not at all. A few delivered meals. But most of the bus drivers were paid to stay home.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why MCPS, which is supposed to be a good school system, doesn't implement a good in-person tutoring program like the one in North Carolina. Using federal COVID relief dollars, tutors are paid $15/hr, and "work consistently with students in 30 to 45-minute sessions, three times a week. The tutors receive a five-day training on phonics and they use test data to pinpoint where students need help" (https://www.wunc.org/education/2022-01-31/nc-education-corps-tutors-are-tackling-learning-recovery-and-building-the-teacher-pipeline).
https://nceducationcorps.org/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah MCPS….the three billion dollar gang that can’t shoot straight. Shocked they didn’t simply offer the tutors free eye and dental - they would have plenty of folks. Hell they paid bus drivers to sit at home during pandemic - many of whom simply left when economy turned and MCPS was caught flat footed for all their ‘generosity’. Such a laughingstock.
Many of the bus drivers were working.
Anonymous wrote:The program was just another PR stunt by MCPS to deflect from the lack of instruction in the classroom. Have smaller class sizes then true teachers with curriculum experience could have the time to meet the needs of the students who have gaps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why MCPS, which is supposed to be a good school system, doesn't implement a good in-person tutoring program like the one in North Carolina. Using federal COVID relief dollars, tutors are paid $15/hr, and "work consistently with students in 30 to 45-minute sessions, three times a week. The tutors receive a five-day training on phonics and they use test data to pinpoint where students need help" (https://www.wunc.org/education/2022-01-31/nc-education-corps-tutors-are-tackling-learning-recovery-and-building-the-teacher-pipeline).
https://nceducationcorps.org/
$15 an hour for a tutor could be what mcps is offering and that is why they do not have enough! It is less than half the going rate for 1 on 1 tutoring in this area.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why MCPS, which is supposed to be a good school system, doesn't implement a good in-person tutoring program like the one in North Carolina. Using federal COVID relief dollars, tutors are paid $15/hr, and "work consistently with students in 30 to 45-minute sessions, three times a week. The tutors receive a five-day training on phonics and they use test data to pinpoint where students need help" (https://www.wunc.org/education/2022-01-31/nc-education-corps-tutors-are-tackling-learning-recovery-and-building-the-teacher-pipeline).
https://nceducationcorps.org/
Anonymous wrote:Ah MCPS….the three billion dollar gang that can’t shoot straight. Shocked they didn’t simply offer the tutors free eye and dental - they would have plenty of folks. Hell they paid bus drivers to sit at home during pandemic - many of whom simply left when economy turned and MCPS was caught flat footed for all their ‘generosity’. Such a laughingstock.
Anonymous wrote:Ah MCPS….the three billion dollar gang that can’t shoot straight. Shocked they didn’t simply offer the tutors free eye and dental - they would have plenty of folks. Hell they paid bus drivers to sit at home during pandemic - many of whom simply left when economy turned and MCPS was caught flat footed for all their ‘generosity’. Such a laughingstock.