Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Wow, PPs. Please join the rest of us in the 21st century. I know you live to bash ACPS, but in this case, your going to have to trash education nationwide, which is moving away from textbooks. You can still see the course content, just contact your kid's teacher.
Meanwhile, be grateful your kid doesn't have to haul a bunch of books back and forth, and that updates to curriculum can be delivered and adopted more rapidly because the school doesn't have to pay for a bunch of trees to be pulped and handed out.
There is so much privilege in your post it’s nauseating. But it’s a perfect pro ACPS thing to say. Bless your heart.
I would agree though that the lack of textbooks are a national trend so I guess I do have a concern nationally. And generally, there are ACPS problems that are consistent with issues nationally. The problem is ACPS at best is the same and usually worse on them.
Where is the equity in putting the onerous on parents to get the curriculum online to supplement and support their child. You think everyone has high speed internet, even knows about how to get that information online, etc? Just look at the nightmare that was covid and virtual learning. How many kids actually logged on? How many kids had parents always checking to make sure they learned? The privileged ones. The UMC and UC white people, who claim to be super progressive, cannot comprehend that some kids (probably a lot of kids), don't have the same kind of support at home. Having an actual textbook should't be a luxury.
DC was on a sports team last year with a kid who lived in Section 8 in OT (some of the rougher ones) and I basically drove him to all practices and games for a year. Nice kid, but he often was home alone, or had stayed up very late because no one told him to go to bed or enforced a bedtime, would often have not eaten because no one thought to remind him to eat (he had food in the house), he told us he never logged on to virtual school almost the entire time ACPS was virtual (and we all know how long that is) and he just passed both grades both years which he thought was funny. He said he had to use a hotspot from his brother's phone to be able to log on, and so it was just a pain so he didn't do it. You think he is the exception? You think his parents who don't speak English have any idea how to follow up with the curriculum online? People need to wake up.