Anonymous wrote:My daughter, in advanced 7th grade English, was told to make an Instagram post about a book she read. NOT HAPPY. Too many powerpoint presentations, not enough essays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Private elementary - much happier. The official curriculum is in some ways not much better than public (there's still too much Lucy Calkins influence), but it includes explicit teaching of spelling, grammar, and how to structure a paragraph. There are whole class novels. There are five paragraph essays.
We are looking for a different private for elementary. That sounds better than our public. If you do not mind, which private school is the one above? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:I’m concerned my kid is not going to read enough books for school or learn how to write with proper form and grammar the way things are headed with curriculum these days. They have the interest and aptitude to achieve much more than this (avid reader in free time, far above grade level in ELA currently, enjoys creative writing). Are you happy with what your middle or high schooler is learning in these areas, are they being challenged, and if so, where are they in school?
Anonymous wrote:
Private elementary - much happier. The official curriculum is in some ways not much better than public (there's still too much Lucy Calkins influence), but it includes explicit teaching of spelling, grammar, and how to structure a paragraph. There are whole class novels. There are five paragraph essays.
Anonymous wrote:Public elementary - was not happy, except with the first grade teacher who of her own initiative taught herself how to teach phonics. She was awesome. Other than that, the kids were given sub-standard, non-evidence based language arts instruction.
Private elementary - much happier. The official curriculum is in some ways not much better than public (there's still too much Lucy Calkins influence), but it includes explicit teaching of spelling, grammar, and how to structure a paragraph. There are whole class novels. There are five paragraph essays.
Private middle - quite happy, backfilled a lot of gaps created in public elementary.
But this is the stereotype about public v. private these days, of course. Private will teach your kid to read and write. Public won't. But public high school will generally have better STEM education simply by having higher numbers of kids who are prepared for it, except when compared to the most high achieving, hard-to-get-into privates.