Anonymous wrote:My youngest is in college now. There has never been textbooks sent home since my eldest was in public school in MoCo. I just bought 2nd-hand textbooks on Amazon for all grades and all subjects since my eldest went to school and basically made sure that I was teaching them the material in a systematic manner at home.
In my country of origin -
- We had textbooks that we kept at home, and the same textbooks were used in classrooms too. We had to buy the textbooks for the next grade before the school closed for the end of the academic year.
- Textbooks were standardized for the entire state or national board.
- We were given the curriculum and extensive syllabus for all subjects
- We knew what chapter was covered in each week in each subject
- homework was mandatory but not graded
- All tests and exams were graded and they were sent back home so our parents could check our progress.
- Curriculum, exams, textbooks and syllabus were standardized.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Mary’s does but seem to provide textbooks that students can actually bring home, at least not in elementary grades.
It’s been awhile since I’ve been in school. Is this a new thing/trend (not to provide textbooks that students can bring home)?? Or is this just a St Mary’s thing? Or a money-saving thing? It’s very odd to me.
What grade? My DC at BSSM (if that is the same St Mary’s, meaning the one in Alexandria), has textbooks and/or workbooks for every class. DC is in the middle school and has always had textbooks.
Anonymous wrote:St Mary’s does but seem to provide textbooks that students can actually bring home, at least not in elementary grades.
It’s been awhile since I’ve been in school. Is this a new thing/trend (not to provide textbooks that students can bring home)?? Or is this just a St Mary’s thing? Or a money-saving thing? It’s very odd to me.