Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As for what MCPS is "doing about it," they're throwing virtual tutors from a third-party company at the problem. Even though only 15% of kids are using it.
It's engendering much confidence in my books that MCPS is serious about closing the learning loss gap from the pandemic at all. But when you press them, they insist that "tutoring isn't all we're doing."
Our virtual tutors have been a huge lifesaver and we are really appreciative of them. This has nothing to do with the learning loss gap. It has to do with the teaching style and curriculum and it isn't working.
Kids who are struggling with Algebra 2, which builds on foundations in pre-algebra and algebra, which many were half-awake for on Zoom during the pandemic, has nothing to do with why kids are struggling with math material today? That's what you're sticking to?
I agree with you that the lack of homework and a textbook is an issue too, but it can be a BOTH/AND situation and not an EITHER/OR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I posted before about my child's struggles with a particular teacher's very rigorous AP Calc BC course. After straight As in math every year, and indeed in every course he's ever taken, including all his AP courses, he has a C in that course.
In our situation it's quite clearly the teacher, but his school can't do anything about it since there are teacher shortages, they can't hire anyone else, and can't persuade the teacher to change - they've tried.
I'm sorry this is happening, OP. Since your child had Honors Geometry last year, do you suspect that Algebra I instruction was lacking two years ago, during the pandemic? It might not be entirely the current teacher's responsibility in your case.
I'm curious about the school. My kid is in BC at WCHS and claims that the other teacher has much higher grades. I'm not sure which is the 'better' teacher, but the grades seem quite different. Older sibling didn't have this teacher but said the same thing-- one teacher with much lower grades than the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're not alone. The math scores for MCPS are in the gutter and many kids are struggling to catch up or be on-level.
I'm curious about the part about colleges seeing your son's retake attempts and frowning. I thought if you retake the class for original credit, then they would only see the replacement grade on the transcript not the original failing grade?
I don't have info on this, but it seems like at a minimum colleges would see
a) a change in course -- honors in fall semester and non-honors in spring, and
b) the dates of a course (if made up in summer, the course dates would show summer rather than academic year).
Maybe they see more than that, but even if not, the above would enable them to draw a conclusion.
Anonymous wrote:You're not alone. The math scores for MCPS are in the gutter and many kids are struggling to catch up or be on-level.
I'm curious about the part about colleges seeing your son's retake attempts and frowning. I thought if you retake the class for original credit, then they would only see the replacement grade on the transcript not the original failing grade?
Anonymous wrote:I posted before about my child's struggles with a particular teacher's very rigorous AP Calc BC course. After straight As in math every year, and indeed in every course he's ever taken, including all his AP courses, he has a C in that course.
In our situation it's quite clearly the teacher, but his school can't do anything about it since there are teacher shortages, they can't hire anyone else, and can't persuade the teacher to change - they've tried.
I'm sorry this is happening, OP. Since your child had Honors Geometry last year, do you suspect that Algebra I instruction was lacking two years ago, during the pandemic? It might not be entirely the current teacher's responsibility in your case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As for what MCPS is "doing about it," they're throwing virtual tutors from a third-party company at the problem. Even though only 15% of kids are using it.
It's engendering much confidence in my books that MCPS is serious about closing the learning loss gap from the pandemic at all. But when you press them, they insist that "tutoring isn't all we're doing."
Our virtual tutors have been a huge lifesaver and we are really appreciative of them. This has nothing to do with the learning loss gap. It has to do with the teaching style and curriculum and it isn't working.
Anonymous wrote:As for what MCPS is "doing about it," they're throwing virtual tutors from a third-party company at the problem. Even though only 15% of kids are using it.
It's engendering much confidence in my books that MCPS is serious about closing the learning loss gap from the pandemic at all. But when you press them, they insist that "tutoring isn't all we're doing."
Anonymous wrote:As for what MCPS is "doing about it," they're throwing virtual tutors from a third-party company at the problem. Even though only 15% of kids are using it.
It's not engendering much confidence in my books that MCPS is serious about closing the learning loss gap from the pandemic at all. But when you press them, they insist that "tutoring isn't all we're doing."