Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too man parents complained and pushed their kids into CM. This is what you get.
My 17 yr old was in CM, first class to go into the CM program. When DC was in it, the entrance criteria was high. Only a handful of kids got in.
By the time DC#2 got to CM, they relaxed the criteria, by a lot. It went from maybe 6 to 10 kids per grade to more like 2/3 of the grade. I volunteered once for CM class, and I could clearly see that some of those kids really didn't belong there. They could barely do their times table.
During parent-teacher conference I asked the teacher if they thought DC#2 should be in CM or not because DC seemed to be struggling a bit at times. Teacher said it's fine, plus if they bumped DC down to "regular" class, DC would have no peer group because that group now was for the really slow track. There was nothing in between slow and advanced. Really dumb move on MCPS part, but they capitulated to aggressive parents.
Both DCs are in advanced math track still. But, it's clear DC#1 is much stronger in math (800 on SAT, 5 AP Calc), whereas DC#2 doing well got As in math, but I know this DC won't get 800 on SAT or 5 in AP calc.
They really need an "in between" group .
Similar experience except they didn't call it compacted math when my kids were in elementary. They just called it Math 4/5 or Math 5/6. In the case for both kids, they ended up slowing down their math track in middle school because they missed a lot with the accelerated math in elementary. CM should only really be for the very high flyers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, actually she skipped AIM and went straight to Algebra 1. Now in Honors Geo in 7th. Acceleration like this is made for kids who catch on quickly and don't need the same thing repeated for weeks on end. What MCPS accelerated classes do NOT do, is go more in-depth, which is a shame. You need to get lucky and snag a spot in the TPMS STEM magnet middle school for that, and continue on to the high school STEM magnets.
I've been told that's usually only an option at a few wealthy schools in the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too man parents complained and pushed their kids into CM. This is what you get.
My 17 yr old was in CM, first class to go into the CM program. When DC was in it, the entrance criteria was high. Only a handful of kids got in.
By the time DC#2 got to CM, they relaxed the criteria, by a lot. It went from maybe 6 to 10 kids per grade to more like 2/3 of the grade. I volunteered once for CM class, and I could clearly see that some of those kids really didn't belong there. They could barely do their times table.
During parent-teacher conference I asked the teacher if they thought DC#2 should be in CM or not because DC seemed to be struggling a bit at times. Teacher said it's fine, plus if they bumped DC down to "regular" class, DC would have no peer group because that group now was for the really slow track. There was nothing in between slow and advanced. Really dumb move on MCPS part, but they capitulated to aggressive parents.
Both DCs are in advanced math track still. But, it's clear DC#1 is much stronger in math (800 on SAT, 5 AP Calc), whereas DC#2 doing well got As in math, but I know this DC won't get 800 on SAT or 5 in AP calc.
They really need an "in between" group .
Similar experience except they didn't call it compacted math when my kids were in elementary. They just called it Math 4/5 or Math 5/6. In the case for both kids, they ended up slowing down their math track in middle school because they missed a lot with the accelerated math in elementary. CM should only really be for the very high flyers.
Anonymous wrote:
No, actually she skipped AIM and went straight to Algebra 1. Now in Honors Geo in 7th. Acceleration like this is made for kids who catch on quickly and don't need the same thing repeated for weeks on end. What MCPS accelerated classes do NOT do, is go more in-depth, which is a shame. You need to get lucky and snag a spot in the TPMS STEM magnet middle school for that, and continue on to the high school STEM magnets.
Anonymous wrote:Too man parents complained and pushed their kids into CM. This is what you get.
My 17 yr old was in CM, first class to go into the CM program. When DC was in it, the entrance criteria was high. Only a handful of kids got in.
By the time DC#2 got to CM, they relaxed the criteria, by a lot. It went from maybe 6 to 10 kids per grade to more like 2/3 of the grade. I volunteered once for CM class, and I could clearly see that some of those kids really didn't belong there. They could barely do their times table.
During parent-teacher conference I asked the teacher if they thought DC#2 should be in CM or not because DC seemed to be struggling a bit at times. Teacher said it's fine, plus if they bumped DC down to "regular" class, DC would have no peer group because that group now was for the really slow track. There was nothing in between slow and advanced. Really dumb move on MCPS part, but they capitulated to aggressive parents.
Both DCs are in advanced math track still. But, it's clear DC#1 is much stronger in math (800 on SAT, 5 AP Calc), whereas DC#2 doing well got As in math, but I know this DC won't get 800 on SAT or 5 in AP calc.
They really need an "in between" group .
Anonymous wrote:DC is in 5/6 and doing fine-not-great (Bs). They would benefit, really, from slowing down in MS and beyond (not a STEM kid at all). Is that an option if the completion of 5/6 is satisfactory? In other words, can DC request something slower/lower than AIM even if grades in 5/6 are ok? I also assume that a math pullback would have no impact on eligibility for Global Humanities (which DC would love and is qualified for)--or would it?
Anonymous wrote:If you don't think your kid will do well in advanced math in the upper grades I would drop your kid down a level going into MS. Having a strong Algebra understanding is super important for the upper math classes.
Anonymous wrote:My kid who is in compacted math and is doing great regularly tells me that students in his class do not do well on assessments/quizzes etc. my current 3rd grader will also probably be in compacted math, he is good but not as good as his older sibling. My question is if your child was in compacted math, did he/she have problems in later math classes like algebra, AIM etc? [/quote
Compact math is super slow already for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:
No, actually she skipped AIM and went straight to Algebra 1. Now in Honors Geo in 7th. Acceleration like this is made for kids who catch on quickly and don't need the same thing repeated for weeks on end. What MCPS accelerated classes do NOT do, is go more in-depth, which is a shame. You need to get lucky and snag a spot in the TPMS STEM magnet middle school for that, and continue on to the high school STEM magnets.