Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it completely on the 150+ kids. I am a teacher. I taught in FCPS for many years.
My frustration stems from math class more than anything. In this class, the teacher is doing a few practice problems with kids and then gives them class time to complete homework. The teacher never moves around the room to see how kids are doing and students who are lost have no idea that they are actually lost until they take a test. Test grades only come back in SIS (weeks later) and students are not seeing any graded problems and have no idea where they are going wrong.
I'm a bit frustrated with English too. My kid spent days writing an essay and got no feedback other than a score in SIS. On the other hand, this teacher has made my kid enjoy English for the first time in a number of years - so he's doing something really well!
I feel for the teachers. I know they are overworked, underpaid, and worn out. But this total lack of feedback is frustrating when a kid is falling down and has no understanding of where they are going wrong. It puts a lot of onus on a KID if the only way to get any feedback is to make separate meetings with each teacher on a constant basis. This seems like a lot to ask.
If your HS aged kid can’t meet with their teacher and ask for help then they are in no way ready for the real world.
DP. When we were kids, this was not the expectation for high school students. And we (presumably, since we're posting here) made it in the real world.
When we were kids there also wasn't a forced 90 minute block every other day set aside specifically to meet with teachers. This has been built into the schedule for this reason.
Apparently no kids know this since no kids are doing it...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it completely on the 150+ kids. I am a teacher. I taught in FCPS for many years.
My frustration stems from math class more than anything. In this class, the teacher is doing a few practice problems with kids and then gives them class time to complete homework. The teacher never moves around the room to see how kids are doing and students who are lost have no idea that they are actually lost until they take a test. Test grades only come back in SIS (weeks later) and students are not seeing any graded problems and have no idea where they are going wrong.
I'm a bit frustrated with English too. My kid spent days writing an essay and got no feedback other than a score in SIS. On the other hand, this teacher has made my kid enjoy English for the first time in a number of years - so he's doing something really well!
I feel for the teachers. I know they are overworked, underpaid, and worn out. But this total lack of feedback is frustrating when a kid is falling down and has no understanding of where they are going wrong. It puts a lot of onus on a KID if the only way to get any feedback is to make separate meetings with each teacher on a constant basis. This seems like a lot to ask.
If your HS aged kid can’t meet with their teacher and ask for help then they are in no way ready for the real world.
DP. When we were kids, this was not the expectation for high school students. And we (presumably, since we're posting here) made it in the real world.
When we were kids there also wasn't a forced 90 minute block every other day set aside specifically to meet with teachers. This has been built into the schedule for this reason.
Apparently no kids know this since no kids are doing it...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it completely on the 150+ kids. I am a teacher. I taught in FCPS for many years.
My frustration stems from math class more than anything. In this class, the teacher is doing a few practice problems with kids and then gives them class time to complete homework. The teacher never moves around the room to see how kids are doing and students who are lost have no idea that they are actually lost until they take a test. Test grades only come back in SIS (weeks later) and students are not seeing any graded problems and have no idea where they are going wrong.
I'm a bit frustrated with English too. My kid spent days writing an essay and got no feedback other than a score in SIS. On the other hand, this teacher has made my kid enjoy English for the first time in a number of years - so he's doing something really well!
I feel for the teachers. I know they are overworked, underpaid, and worn out. But this total lack of feedback is frustrating when a kid is falling down and has no understanding of where they are going wrong. It puts a lot of onus on a KID if the only way to get any feedback is to make separate meetings with each teacher on a constant basis. This seems like a lot to ask.
If your HS aged kid can’t meet with their teacher and ask for help then they are in no way ready for the real world.
DP. When we were kids, this was not the expectation for high school students. And we (presumably, since we're posting here) made it in the real world.
When we were kids there also wasn't a forced 90 minute block every other day set aside specifically to meet with teachers. This has been built into the schedule for this reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it completely on the 150+ kids. I am a teacher. I taught in FCPS for many years.
My frustration stems from math class more than anything. In this class, the teacher is doing a few practice problems with kids and then gives them class time to complete homework. The teacher never moves around the room to see how kids are doing and students who are lost have no idea that they are actually lost until they take a test. Test grades only come back in SIS (weeks later) and students are not seeing any graded problems and have no idea where they are going wrong.
I'm a bit frustrated with English too. My kid spent days writing an essay and got no feedback other than a score in SIS. On the other hand, this teacher has made my kid enjoy English for the first time in a number of years - so he's doing something really well!
I feel for the teachers. I know they are overworked, underpaid, and worn out. But this total lack of feedback is frustrating when a kid is falling down and has no understanding of where they are going wrong. It puts a lot of onus on a KID if the only way to get any feedback is to make separate meetings with each teacher on a constant basis. This seems like a lot to ask.
If your HS aged kid can’t meet with their teacher and ask for help then they are in no way ready for the real world.
DP. When we were kids, this was not the expectation for high school students. And we (presumably, since we're posting here) made it in the real world.
Anonymous wrote:I get it completely on the 150+ kids. I am a teacher. I taught in FCPS for many years.
My frustration stems from math class more than anything. In this class, the teacher is doing a few practice problems with kids and then gives them class time to complete homework. The teacher never moves around the room to see how kids are doing and students who are lost have no idea that they are actually lost until they take a test. Test grades only come back in SIS (weeks later) and students are not seeing any graded problems and have no idea where they are going wrong.
I'm a bit frustrated with English too. My kid spent days writing an essay and got no feedback other than a score in SIS. On the other hand, this teacher has made my kid enjoy English for the first time in a number of years - so he's doing something really well!
I feel for the teachers. I know they are overworked, underpaid, and worn out. But this total lack of feedback is frustrating when a kid is falling down and has no understanding of where they are going wrong. It puts a lot of onus on a KID if the only way to get any feedback is to make separate meetings with each teacher on a constant basis. This seems like a lot to ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get it completely on the 150+ kids. I am a teacher. I taught in FCPS for many years.
My frustration stems from math class more than anything. In this class, the teacher is doing a few practice problems with kids and then gives them class time to complete homework. The teacher never moves around the room to see how kids are doing and students who are lost have no idea that they are actually lost until they take a test. Test grades only come back in SIS (weeks later) and students are not seeing any graded problems and have no idea where they are going wrong.
I'm a bit frustrated with English too. My kid spent days writing an essay and got no feedback other than a score in SIS. On the other hand, this teacher has made my kid enjoy English for the first time in a number of years - so he's doing something really well!
I feel for the teachers. I know they are overworked, underpaid, and worn out. But this total lack of feedback is frustrating when a kid is falling down and has no understanding of where they are going wrong. It puts a lot of onus on a KID if the only way to get any feedback is to make separate meetings with each teacher on a constant basis. This seems like a lot to ask.
If your HS aged kid can’t meet with their teacher and ask for help then they are in no way ready for the real world.
Anonymous wrote:I get it completely on the 150+ kids. I am a teacher. I taught in FCPS for many years.
My frustration stems from math class more than anything. In this class, the teacher is doing a few practice problems with kids and then gives them class time to complete homework. The teacher never moves around the room to see how kids are doing and students who are lost have no idea that they are actually lost until they take a test. Test grades only come back in SIS (weeks later) and students are not seeing any graded problems and have no idea where they are going wrong.
I'm a bit frustrated with English too. My kid spent days writing an essay and got no feedback other than a score in SIS. On the other hand, this teacher has made my kid enjoy English for the first time in a number of years - so he's doing something really well!
I feel for the teachers. I know they are overworked, underpaid, and worn out. But this total lack of feedback is frustrating when a kid is falling down and has no understanding of where they are going wrong. It puts a lot of onus on a KID if the only way to get any feedback is to make separate meetings with each teacher on a constant basis. This seems like a lot to ask.
Anonymous wrote:It sucks. The reality is what you want is not unreasonable except for the amount of students teachers have makes it really hard to do that. They can’t go over test answers as a class because unfortunately kids get endless retakes so they’d just be giving test answers out and then kids would ask to retake the test with them. They can’t grade homework as summative. Essays, I agree, ideally they get feedback- for my students, I give a grade and then offer them the ability to schedule a conference with me during their study hall or before or after school to discuss the grade and provide feedback. This would enable me to target specific feedback to the kids who really want it rather than expending hours giving it to kids who don’t read it. Nobody has ever taken me up on that though so I do think it’s worth considering you the parent might want the feedback more than the kid, which I get, but which won’t ultimately matter. They have to be the one to want it in order to actually apply it.
Anonymous wrote:It sucks. The reality is what you want is not unreasonable except for the amount of students teachers have makes it really hard to do that. They can’t go over test answers as a class because unfortunately kids get endless retakes so they’d just be giving test answers out and then kids would ask to retake the test with them. They can’t grade homework as summative. Essays, I agree, ideally they get feedback- for my students, I give a grade and then offer them the ability to schedule a conference with me during their study hall or before or after school to discuss the grade and provide feedback. This would enable me to target specific feedback to the kids who really want it rather than expending hours giving it to kids who don’t read it. Nobody has ever taken me up on that though so I do think it’s worth considering you the parent might want the feedback more than the kid, which I get, but which won’t ultimately matter. They have to be the one to want it in order to actually apply it.
Anonymous wrote:You need a new school.