Anonymous wrote:Of course there are. Part of the “repairing” after the Beidelman disaster was to post on MCPS website updated “report concerns” links. They also included those links in emails for a couple of months. It’s surprising the number isn’t higher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything is fine
No, its not but clearly you don't have kids in MCPS.
I pictured this tone:
Sometimes people don’t pick up on satire…
Anonymous wrote:SOURCE: https://wapo.st/3RQe3ZB
Montgomery County’s inspector general fielded a surge in complaints in the past year about Maryland’s largest school system as the district has faced increased scrutiny of its handling of reports about conduct.
The county inspector general received 185 complaints from July 1, 2023, to June 30 of this year about the school system, compared with 22 from the year before, according to data provided by the office this week. The office did not provide more context about the nature of the complaints, though it has released reports this year concerning the school system’s use of funds, allegations of misconduct and a department’s handling of employees’ complaints.
Many of the complaints — 81 in total — were referred back to Montgomery County Public Schools for further action with the complainant’s consent, the office said.
David Stein, president of the Montgomery County Education Association, a union that represents teachers, said the data shows “that teachers have lost trust with the school district and are looking to go elsewhere to give their complaints.”
“I think it shows what the new superintendent needs to do — that there’s a trust deficit he needs to address immediately,” Stein continued. “And we trust that he’ll be able to do that if he’s open and transparent and willing to work with us.”
Anonymous wrote:One of these was mine. I copied the Washington Post article about Beidleman and sent it to MoCo OIG, the State OIG, and the US Dept of Ed as a Title IX complaint.
Since they all seemed to be blissfully unaware of the situation, I wanted to make sure they had no excuse stemming from failure to report by me personally.
Will they clean up their act? That's a different question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything is fine
No, its not but clearly you don't have kids in MCPS.
I do an I agree with them, but I also don't expect the county to raise my kids for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything is fine
No, its not but clearly you don't have kids in MCPS.
I pictured this tone:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything is fine
No, its not but clearly you don't have kids in MCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything is fine
No, its not but clearly you don't have kids in MCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Everything is fine
Anonymous wrote:Everything is fine
Montgomery County’s inspector general fielded a surge in complaints in the past year about Maryland’s largest school system as the district has faced increased scrutiny of its handling of reports about conduct.
The county inspector general received 185 complaints from July 1, 2023, to June 30 of this year about the school system, compared with 22 from the year before, according to data provided by the office this week. The office did not provide more context about the nature of the complaints, though it has released reports this year concerning the school system’s use of funds, allegations of misconduct and a department’s handling of employees’ complaints.
Many of the complaints — 81 in total — were referred back to Montgomery County Public Schools for further action with the complainant’s consent, the office said.
David Stein, president of the Montgomery County Education Association, a union that represents teachers, said the data shows “that teachers have lost trust with the school district and are looking to go elsewhere to give their complaints.”
“I think it shows what the new superintendent needs to do — that there’s a trust deficit he needs to address immediately,” Stein continued. “And we trust that he’ll be able to do that if he’s open and transparent and willing to work with us.”