Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You had your kid do the correct thing. Learning to advocate for oneself is a necessary skill. You and your child should absolutely follow this up until it is corrected properly. Your child should give it a couple of days and if no response is received. Your child should send a followup email to the counselor and teacher asking when this situation will be resolved and copy you. That way you can then come in as their advocate and followup as necessary.
Let me guess - is your child is Asian? I've seen it happen before. A warning that this is how underlying racism at MCPS occurs.
If anyone says this phrase, my guess is this is probably someone at MCPS covering these incidents up. I truly believe MCPS CO doesn't want other parents knowing or making a fuss about it.
DOCUMENT E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G AND HAVE A LAWYER READY.
If another "accident" occurs, bypass the MCPS CFP route and file a formal complaint directly with the Department of Education OCR.
OP here.
Couple things:
1. When this happened the first time they counsellor changed the grade pretty quickly without asking for proof. Which was weird but I knew it was right so I was happy. I was nervous about the "reissued report card" but the magnet my child got into was actually centered around the subject with the grade at issue, so that worked out.
2. My child is a straight up white boy. Whitest of white. Weird rant. Thanks tho?
Anonymous wrote:Interesting, almost the same thing happened to my middle schooler. Teacher said she was going to grade three assignments in science but then didn’t. I had my son advocate for himself but she scolded him. I emailed her myself and she completely ignored me. In this case, his grade was a high C but should have been an A. He is not going to be considered for a magnet program because of this. All his other grades are As. I’ve had conference with her previously and she just basically said my son doesn’t participate and is checked out. No other teacher has said anything like that. We are Asian but I don’t think that has anything to do with it, but it really feels like the teacher has it in for him. I just used it as a learning lesson that there will be difficult people throughout your life and you have to find ways to deal with them.
Anonymous wrote:My child has had two classes in the past year where his grade has been inaccurate on the report card. He is in middle school.
Once was due to Covid-related absences when the teacher said he was excused, then didn't actually excuse the grade, he asked again, she said sorry she'd change it, and she still never changed it. He would have happily done the work but it wasn't Canvas accessible and she kept tell him not to worry. This was Q4 and she left the school so I contacted the counsellor since it was so complicated. Report card was re-issued.
Now it's happened again: with an assignment he clearly did, but the teacher never graded it in Synergy. I know he did it because she graded it, on time, in Canvas. He asked her about it and she said it would be there. Then it wasn't. When he mentioned it after the grading period ended she sighed and said that it was a lot of work for her to change it. Apparently another kid had the same issue and my kid witnessed the same conversation. It's almost as if she is refusing to correct her mistake?
In both cases it was documented as a B for the quarter but he earned an A. I am not letting that slide.
I asked him to write his counsellor directly this time. His email was fine, but obviously awkward and it isn't totally clear he did the work (he was trying to be polite). I am concerned the counsellor will think he's a grade grubber, which he isn't, and he's already admitted to a magnet, so I guess there's nothing on the line. But I am frustrated this has happened twice! Is this happening anyone else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You had your kid do the correct thing. Learning to advocate for oneself is a necessary skill. You and your child should absolutely follow this up until it is corrected properly. Your child should give it a couple of days and if no response is received. Your child should send a followup email to the counselor and teacher asking when this situation will be resolved and copy you. That way you can then come in as their advocate and followup as necessary.
Let me guess - is your child is Asian? I've seen it happen before. A warning that this is how underlying racism at MCPS occurs.
If anyone says this phrase, my guess is this is probably someone at MCPS covering these incidents up. I truly believe MCPS CO doesn't want other parents knowing or making a fuss about it.
DOCUMENT E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G AND HAVE A LAWYER READY.
If another "accident" occurs, bypass the MCPS CFP route and file a formal complaint directly with the Department of Education OCR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You had your kid do the correct thing. Learning to advocate for oneself is a necessary skill. You and your child should absolutely follow this up until it is corrected properly. Your child should give it a couple of days and if no response is received. Your child should send a followup email to the counselor and teacher asking when this situation will be resolved and copy you. That way you can then come in as their advocate and followup as necessary.
Let me guess - is your child is Asian? I've seen it happen before. A warning that this is how underlying racism at MCPS occurs.
If anyone says this phrase, my guess is this is probably someone at MCPS covering these incidents up. I truly believe MCPS CO doesn't want other parents knowing or making a fuss about it.
DOCUMENT E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G AND HAVE A LAWYER READY.
If another "accident" occurs, bypass the MCPS CFP route and file a formal complaint directly with the Department of Education OCR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You had your kid do the correct thing. Learning to advocate for oneself is a necessary skill. You and your child should absolutely follow this up until it is corrected properly. Your child should give it a couple of days and if no response is received. Your child should send a followup email to the counselor and teacher asking when this situation will be resolved and copy you. That way you can then come in as their advocate and followup as necessary.
Let me guess - is your child is Asian? I've seen it happen before. A warning that this is how underlying racism at MCPS occurs.
If anyone says this phrase, my guess is this is probably someone at MCPS covering these incidents up. I truly believe MCPS CO doesn't want other parents knowing or making a fuss about it.
DOCUMENT E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G AND HAVE A LAWYER READY.
If another "accident" occurs, bypass the MCPS CFP route and file a formal complaint directly with the Department of Education OCR.
Anonymous wrote:You had your kid do the correct thing. Learning to advocate for oneself is a necessary skill. You and your child should absolutely follow this up until it is corrected properly. Your child should give it a couple of days and if no response is received. Your child should send a followup email to the counselor and teacher asking when this situation will be resolved and copy you. That way you can then come in as their advocate and followup as necessary.