Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hasn't compacted math been going away for a decade now?
It seems to be out of step with equity whose goal is to dumb down all high-achievers to create an equally bad outcome.
I know that you view equity this way, but an actual equitable approach to this question is the one MCPS was pursuing at at least one point. An equitable approach acknowledges that kids are coming in with different levels of support, and scaffolds in additional support to kids who have potential but lack the advantages of some of their peers.
My child (middle class, single parent household) benefited from that approach through free Saturday enrichment beginning in 3rd grade. MCPS identified my child as "gifted" but correctly identified that my child did not have access to expensive and time-consuming outside enrichment. So they plugged in that support to help create a level playing ground. Many years later, my child was successful in a rigorous magnet programs and has already secured admission to their first-choice college. No wealthy or well-supported child was harmed through the "equity-based" support that MCPS gave my child in elementary school, and no one's class was "dumbed down" because the district tried to level the playing ground through free enrichment for gifted kids from low and medium income families.
dp. I'm fully supportive of MCPS's enrichment programs, and happy to help fund it for low income kids.
However, MCPS has dumbed down programs. "Honors" health in HS is a perfect example of this. The class is ridiculously easy, and just has a bunch of busy work, but it's labeled as "honors".
My kids are in HS and college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree that you can ask the Gifted Education Committee. When MCPS tried to take away CM a few years ago, they launched a campaign to keep it. MCPS kept it in place but tightened criteria for placement.
As they should.
My DC was the first class to take CM. There were only a handful of kids who really needed that enrichment.
A few years later, after many parents complained and pushed for their kids to go to CM, the class became huge. I volunteered a few times, and some of those kids definitely did not belong in CM. I felt that my own DC#2 would've been better off in an on track math class, but during parent teacher conference, the teacher said that unfortunately, the "on track" math class now had so few kids, and that it was so much slower, that my DC would probably not be served in that class and would be bored. So we kept DC in CM, but I still think DC would've been better off in a true on track math class, but at the time, there was only CM and the "slower" track.
It was indeed "honors for all" type of scenario.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hasn't compacted math been going away for a decade now?
It seems to be out of step with equity whose goal is to dumb down all high-achievers to create an equally bad outcome.
I know that you view equity this way, but an actual equitable approach to this question is the one MCPS was pursuing at at least one point. An equitable approach acknowledges that kids are coming in with different levels of support, and scaffolds in additional support to kids who have potential but lack the advantages of some of their peers.
My child (middle class, single parent household) benefited from that approach through free Saturday enrichment beginning in 3rd grade. MCPS identified my child as "gifted" but correctly identified that my child did not have access to expensive and time-consuming outside enrichment. So they plugged in that support to help create a level playing ground. Many years later, my child was successful in a rigorous magnet programs and has already secured admission to their first-choice college. No wealthy or well-supported child was harmed through the "equity-based" support that MCPS gave my child in elementary school, and no one's class was "dumbed down" because the district tried to level the playing ground through free enrichment for gifted kids from low and medium income families.
Anonymous wrote:Agree that you can ask the Gifted Education Committee. When MCPS tried to take away CM a few years ago, they launched a campaign to keep it. MCPS kept it in place but tightened criteria for placement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hasn't compacted math been going away for a decade now?
It seems to be out of step with equity whose goal is to dumb down all high-achievers to create an equally bad outcome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hasn't compacted math been going away for a decade now?
I have a 6th grader who just finished it (and is on a more accelerated track in MS because of it) and a 4th grader currently taking it. So, at least for now and in our school, it's going strong.
That said, I don't think tracking kids this early is helpful, though compacted math is less of an issue than the CES/whatever they're calling them now and magnet middle schools.
I think that would be an equitably bad outcome wouldn't it? Equally bad would be if they all just did poorly on their own. Equitably bad is when the school causes equally bad outcomes on purpose.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hasn't compacted math been going away for a decade now?
It seems to be out of step with equity whose goal is to dumb down all high-achievers to create an equally bad outcome.
Anonymous wrote:Hasn't compacted math been going away for a decade now?
Anonymous wrote:Hasn't compacted math been going away for a decade now?