Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless people identify themselves it’s hard to know. But what I do know is this. If you talk about having a good experience, someone will accuse you of being a school district employee. If you point out any positives in a tough situation, same. You get accused of being a teacher or school personnel.
MCPS families know that the school system hired a PR firm and MCPS posts on this board. These past 3 school years have been the worst for special needs students who are still struggling to recover from online learning. The MCPS reputation of spin to deflect from problems makes parents distrust positive posts because it just doesn’t match up with the reality students are experiencing.
Anonymous wrote:Unless people identify themselves it’s hard to know. But what I do know is this. If you talk about having a good experience, someone will accuse you of being a school district employee. If you point out any positives in a tough situation, same. You get accused of being a teacher or school personnel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some threads where there seem to be a disproportionate amount of angry teachers.
Yes - a lot of the IEP threads seem that way to me.
Anonymous wrote:There are some threads where there seem to be a disproportionate amount of angry teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re expecting parents to be reflexively critical of their school’s accommodations and services, think again.
My son has had an IEP for 11 years in MCPS (elementary to high school) and overall we’re very happy with how he’s been treated.
I think, though, that you would generally see a sampling bias. The people most likely to post are the ones most likely to be dissatisfied. I'm sure there are many who are reasonably happy, but those folks are probably way less likely to post.
True. Which is usually what we see on this board. But some of us have been doing this for a long time and we have a bit of perspective - we know that glitches are to be expected, some years the case counselor won’t be up to scratch (one year ours was pregnant and pretty out of it, poor thing), some teachers will need regular reminders to implement the IEP…
…and some others faced with oppositional teams only made it work when they brought in the big guns.
It’s a marathon, not a sprint. Be prepared.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re expecting parents to be reflexively critical of their school’s accommodations and services, think again.
My son has had an IEP for 11 years in MCPS (elementary to high school) and overall we’re very happy with how he’s been treated.
I think, though, that you would generally see a sampling bias. The people most likely to post are the ones most likely to be dissatisfied. I'm sure there are many who are reasonably happy, but those folks are probably way less likely to post.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re expecting parents to be reflexively critical of their school’s accommodations and services, think again.
My son has had an IEP for 11 years in MCPS (elementary to high school) and overall we’re very happy with how he’s been treated.