Anonymous wrote:Informal AMA thread. I am already shocked and saddened by the state of public elementary. This is in a wealthy suburb. There’s is a free lunch contingent but test scores are excellent and if you watch morning drop off it’s a lot of luxury vehicles.
I’m shocked at how we enroll and keep some kids who have academic and social needs we can’t possibly meet. Often a helper is assigned to one of these kids to try to keep the kid safe while 20 other 6 years old try to ignore yelling and crying and distraction to learn from their teacher. I’ve heard 7 year olds using language I’d feel guilty about even repeating! I’ve watched teacher be kicked and punched and slapped, again by 6 and 7 year olds! And the hot lunches shocked me. The other day I watched one kid eat the following for lunch: giant chocolate chip muffin, chocolate milk, sugary Dannon yogurt, low fat string cheese. This is a “balanced” meal provided by the school.
Maybe I am just out of touch, but I feel many typical parents would be surprised to hear what elementary school is like for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No child left behind REALLY screwed so many kids. It hasn't helped kids avoid being academically left behind. And "least restrictive environment" isn't helpful when the kid is verbally disruptive.
+1. If you haven’t been in a classroom as either a student or a staff member in the past 20 years, you have no idea.
Anonymous wrote:No child left behind REALLY screwed so many kids. It hasn't helped kids avoid being academically left behind. And "least restrictive environment" isn't helpful when the kid is verbally disruptive.
Anonymous wrote:My child has special needs and I volunteered extensively at his Bethesda elementary. I saw a couple of children with very disruptive needs that impacted instructional time. These kids needed non-mainstream placement, but either the parents refused it, or there was no room in the right MCPS special program, or, MCPS did not wish to pay for SN private school outplacement, for the most severe cases.
It’s sad. However, all my kids have good memories of this school, and the Principal and IEP teams did their level best with the resources they had.
Anonymous wrote:How are the teachers holding up? And why do you think things have escalated to this extent? My kids are tweens/teens and they had very "normal," positive elementary experiences.
Anonymous wrote:Do you think our kids don’t tell us this stuff? We know.
What are you doing to help get troubled kids the help they need? (That the school frequently refuses to provide.)
Anonymous wrote:Do you think our kids don’t tell us this stuff? We know.
What are you doing to help get troubled kids the help they need? (That the school frequently refuses to provide.)
Anonymous wrote:Do you think our kids don’t tell us this stuff? We know.
What are you doing to help get troubled kids the help they need? (That the school frequently refuses to provide.)
Anonymous wrote:Informal AMA thread. I am already shocked and saddened by the state of public elementary. This is in a wealthy suburb. There’s is a free lunch contingent but test scores are excellent and if you watch morning drop off it’s a lot of luxury vehicles.
I’m shocked at how we enroll and keep some kids who have academic and social needs we can’t possibly meet. Often a helper is assigned to one of these kids to try to keep the kid safe while 20 other 6 years old try to ignore yelling and crying and distraction to learn from their teacher. I’ve heard 7 year olds using language I’d feel guilty about even repeating! I’ve watched teacher be kicked and punched and slapped, again by 6 and 7 year olds! And the hot lunches shocked me. The other day I watched one kid eat the following for lunch: giant chocolate chip muffin, chocolate milk, sugary Dannon yogurt, low fat string cheese. This is a “balanced” meal provided by the school.
Maybe I am just out of touch, but I feel many typical parents would be surprised to hear what elementary school is like for their kids.