Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our elementary school told us every class had to be at least two over the cap for the grade to get an additional teacher. So for first grade, we had to get 28 across all the classes even though the limit is 26 (which makes no sense to me).
This is correct except one class has to be three over, so you’d need one class at 29 and two at 28.
Anonymous wrote:Our elementary school told us every class had to be at least two over the cap for the grade to get an additional teacher. So for first grade, we had to get 28 across all the classes even though the limit is 26 (which makes no sense to me).
Anonymous wrote:Our elementary school told us every class had to be at least two over the cap for the grade to get an additional teacher. So for first grade, we had to get 28 across all the classes even though the limit is 26 (which makes no sense to me).
Anonymous wrote:I thought the first grade limit was 27 or 28. And I think they have to have a class that has at least 2 over that to get an extra teacher - so that would be 29 or 30.
Anonymous wrote:How many first grade classes are there and are they all at or over 26 kids? That's when a full extra teacher gets hired. (I'm assuming you're correct about the 26. I don't know the 1st grade limit.)
But I've seen them exceed limits when there's a reason. For example, two students were added to a full class because one of the kids in there spoke French & English and the two students were new to the US and only spoke French. (This was 5th grade and it tipped the class to 32 when limit was lower. Teacher could totally handle that number of kids, tho.)
Anonymous wrote:Nothing new here. In MoCo, a W feeder, we had more students than that back in the 70's