Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the Baltimore Banners article on declining school enrollment. (MD/MCPS) Leaders quoted blame everything BUT the obvious: school quality affects enrollment as does the broader impacts of county governments social and economic decisions.
If our schools are already over crowded and underperforming why harp on wanting more enrollment? It’s not going to get better adding thousands more students - the funding per student only goes so far. And those thousands they reference aren’t necessarily the ones whose parents pay top dollar in property taxes or are active donors to the PTA.
Honestly, mcps has been such a disappointment. Property taxes keep increasing, quality of services decrease. Fights over development and housing don’t add up to more revenue and better schools. Montgomery county can’t compete with business friendly nova to attract large companies. Housing is expensive and traffic into the city/va is bumper to bumper.
Sorry for the rant, but maybe they can focus on making it a better place to live than hitting a magic number for a measly percentage of federal tax dollars…
Yep, MCPS is too big for its own good. In theory it could leverage resources across schools to create better academic environment in practice due the way in which MCPS forces school participation to be tied to zip code they essentially are creating winners and losers with all the special programs and lotteries. For example, they say Rockville has a fabulous IB program, but it's at Richard Montgomery and my kids will go to Rockville High School so it's completely unavailable to me except by lottery, might as well be on the moon.
They really need to break up MCPS. I would also be for having parents be able to opt out for home school or private and have the funds made available for the students.
When the schools are a real estate problem you know you've messed up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the Baltimore Banners article on declining school enrollment. (MD/MCPS) Leaders quoted blame everything BUT the obvious: school quality affects enrollment as does the broader impacts of county governments social and economic decisions.
If our schools are already over crowded and underperforming why harp on wanting more enrollment? It’s not going to get better adding thousands more students - the funding per student only goes so far. And those thousands they reference aren’t necessarily the ones whose parents pay top dollar in property taxes or are active donors to the PTA.
Honestly, mcps has been such a disappointment. Property taxes keep increasing, quality of services decrease. Fights over development and housing don’t add up to more revenue and better schools. Montgomery county can’t compete with business friendly nova to attract large companies. Housing is expensive and traffic into the city/va is bumper to bumper.
Sorry for the rant, but maybe they can focus on making it a better place to live than hitting a magic number for a measly percentage of federal tax dollars…
Yep, MCPS is too big for its own good. In theory it could leverage resources across schools to create better academic environment in practice due the way in which MCPS forces school participation to be tied to zip code they essentially are creating winners and losers with all the special programs and lotteries. For example, they say Rockville has a fabulous IB program, but it's at Richard Montgomery and my kids will go to Rockville High School so it's completely unavailable to me except by lottery, might as well be on the moon.
They really need to break up MCPS. I would also be for having parents be able to opt out for home school or private and have the funds made available for the students.
When the schools are a real estate problem you know you've messed up.
They are splitting it as you want to regions. And, many of us will get burned and we'll probably move out of the county once our oldest graduates as our homeowner school has very little to offer and our oldest has suffered academically because of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are some of the other points the Banner says about MCPS kind of leading in the drop in enrollment and some of the reasons why:
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Montgomery County Public Schools experienced one of the steepest declines in enrollment this year, losing about 2% of its population. Superintendent Thomas Taylor said part of the reason is fewer students coming from other countries.
Other political factors may be factoring in, too. Maryland is losing federal jobs faster than any other state, as the Trump administration slashed positions traditionally viewed as stable employment.
Maryland was already losing residents to other states at a high rate in recent years.
“It’s entirely possible that losing 15,000 jobs could have contributed to families having to relocate for other jobs,” Meyer said.
Taylor said skyrocketing housing costs could also be pushing families with young children away.
On top of that, far more families chose to homeschool their children after the pandemic. More than 42,000 kids now learn at home, compared to about 28,000 in 2020.
Private school growth has been far less dramatic since the pandemic. The percentage of Maryland students attending private schools has fluctuated between roughly 12% and 13% since 2017.
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I think that parents choosing to home school kind of indirectly points to the dissatisfaction with the quality of the school system.
True, and people are fleeing Maryland for Virginia and further south for numerous reasons.
That cannot be true since VA is losing population too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here are some of the other points the Banner says about MCPS kind of leading in the drop in enrollment and some of the reasons why:
---------------
Montgomery County Public Schools experienced one of the steepest declines in enrollment this year, losing about 2% of its population. Superintendent Thomas Taylor said part of the reason is fewer students coming from other countries.
Other political factors may be factoring in, too. Maryland is losing federal jobs faster than any other state, as the Trump administration slashed positions traditionally viewed as stable employment.
Maryland was already losing residents to other states at a high rate in recent years.
“It’s entirely possible that losing 15,000 jobs could have contributed to families having to relocate for other jobs,” Meyer said.
Taylor said skyrocketing housing costs could also be pushing families with young children away.
On top of that, far more families chose to homeschool their children after the pandemic. More than 42,000 kids now learn at home, compared to about 28,000 in 2020.
Private school growth has been far less dramatic since the pandemic. The percentage of Maryland students attending private schools has fluctuated between roughly 12% and 13% since 2017.
--------------------------------------
I think that parents choosing to home school kind of indirectly points to the dissatisfaction with the quality of the school system.
True, and people are fleeing Maryland for Virginia and further south for numerous reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Here are some of the other points the Banner says about MCPS kind of leading in the drop in enrollment and some of the reasons why:
---------------
Montgomery County Public Schools experienced one of the steepest declines in enrollment this year, losing about 2% of its population. Superintendent Thomas Taylor said part of the reason is fewer students coming from other countries.
Other political factors may be factoring in, too. Maryland is losing federal jobs faster than any other state, as the Trump administration slashed positions traditionally viewed as stable employment.
Maryland was already losing residents to other states at a high rate in recent years.
“It’s entirely possible that losing 15,000 jobs could have contributed to families having to relocate for other jobs,” Meyer said.
Taylor said skyrocketing housing costs could also be pushing families with young children away.
On top of that, far more families chose to homeschool their children after the pandemic. More than 42,000 kids now learn at home, compared to about 28,000 in 2020.
Private school growth has been far less dramatic since the pandemic. The percentage of Maryland students attending private schools has fluctuated between roughly 12% and 13% since 2017.
--------------------------------------
I think that parents choosing to home school kind of indirectly points to the dissatisfaction with the quality of the school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the Baltimore Banners article on declining school enrollment. (MD/MCPS) Leaders quoted blame everything BUT the obvious: school quality affects enrollment as does the broader impacts of county governments social and economic decisions.
If our schools are already over crowded and underperforming why harp on wanting more enrollment? It’s not going to get better adding thousands more students - the funding per student only goes so far. And those thousands they reference aren’t necessarily the ones whose parents pay top dollar in property taxes or are active donors to the PTA.
Honestly, mcps has been such a disappointment. Property taxes keep increasing, quality of services decrease. Fights over development and housing don’t add up to more revenue and better schools. Montgomery county can’t compete with business friendly nova to attract large companies. Housing is expensive and traffic into the city/va is bumper to bumper.
Sorry for the rant, but maybe they can focus on making it a better place to live than hitting a magic number for a measly percentage of federal tax dollars…
Yep, MCPS is too big for its own good. In theory it could leverage resources across schools to create better academic environment in practice due the way in which MCPS forces school participation to be tied to zip code they essentially are creating winners and losers with all the special programs and lotteries. For example, they say Rockville has a fabulous IB program, but it's at Richard Montgomery and my kids will go to Rockville High School so it's completely unavailable to me except by lottery, might as well be on the moon.
They really need to break up MCPS. I would also be for having parents be able to opt out for home school or private and have the funds made available for the students.
When the schools are a real estate problem you know you've messed up.
We know you'd love to make sure that the public funding intended to be distributed to address the needs of all on a more or less equivalent basis inured more greatly to you and yours, instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the Baltimore Banners article on declining school enrollment. (MD/MCPS) Leaders quoted blame everything BUT the obvious: school quality affects enrollment as does the broader impacts of county governments social and economic decisions.
If our schools are already over crowded and underperforming why harp on wanting more enrollment? It’s not going to get better adding thousands more students - the funding per student only goes so far. And those thousands they reference aren’t necessarily the ones whose parents pay top dollar in property taxes or are active donors to the PTA.
Honestly, mcps has been such a disappointment. Property taxes keep increasing, quality of services decrease. Fights over development and housing don’t add up to more revenue and better schools. Montgomery county can’t compete with business friendly nova to attract large companies. Housing is expensive and traffic into the city/va is bumper to bumper.
Sorry for the rant, but maybe they can focus on making it a better place to live than hitting a magic number for a measly percentage of federal tax dollars…
Yep, MCPS is too big for its own good. In theory it could leverage resources across schools to create better academic environment in practice due the way in which MCPS forces school participation to be tied to zip code they essentially are creating winners and losers with all the special programs and lotteries. For example, they say Rockville has a fabulous IB program, but it's at Richard Montgomery and my kids will go to Rockville High School so it's completely unavailable to me except by lottery, might as well be on the moon.
They really need to break up MCPS. I would also be for having parents be able to opt out for home school or private and have the funds made available for the students.
When the schools are a real estate problem you know you've messed up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read the Baltimore Banners article on declining school enrollment. (MD/MCPS) Leaders quoted blame everything BUT the obvious: school quality affects enrollment as does the broader impacts of county governments social and economic decisions.
If our schools are already over crowded and underperforming why harp on wanting more enrollment? It’s not going to get better adding thousands more students - the funding per student only goes so far. And those thousands they reference aren’t necessarily the ones whose parents pay top dollar in property taxes or are active donors to the PTA.
Honestly, mcps has been such a disappointment. Property taxes keep increasing, quality of services decrease. Fights over development and housing don’t add up to more revenue and better schools. Montgomery county can’t compete with business friendly nova to attract large companies. Housing is expensive and traffic into the city/va is bumper to bumper.
Sorry for the rant, but maybe they can focus on making it a better place to live than hitting a magic number for a measly percentage of federal tax dollars…
Yep, MCPS is too big for its own good. In theory it could leverage resources across schools to create better academic environment in practice due the way in which MCPS forces school participation to be tied to zip code they essentially are creating winners and losers with all the special programs and lotteries. For example, they say Rockville has a fabulous IB program, but it's at Richard Montgomery and my kids will go to Rockville High School so it's completely unavailable to me except by lottery, might as well be on the moon.
They really need to break up MCPS. I would also be for having parents be able to opt out for home school or private and have the funds made available for the students.
When the schools are a real estate problem you know you've messed up.
Anonymous wrote:Read the Baltimore Banners article on declining school enrollment. (MD/MCPS) Leaders quoted blame everything BUT the obvious: school quality affects enrollment as does the broader impacts of county governments social and economic decisions.
If our schools are already over crowded and underperforming why harp on wanting more enrollment? It’s not going to get better adding thousands more students - the funding per student only goes so far. And those thousands they reference aren’t necessarily the ones whose parents pay top dollar in property taxes or are active donors to the PTA.
Honestly, mcps has been such a disappointment. Property taxes keep increasing, quality of services decrease. Fights over development and housing don’t add up to more revenue and better schools. Montgomery county can’t compete with business friendly nova to attract large companies. Housing is expensive and traffic into the city/va is bumper to bumper.
Sorry for the rant, but maybe they can focus on making it a better place to live than hitting a magic number for a measly percentage of federal tax dollars…
Anonymous wrote:Here are some of the other points the Banner says about MCPS kind of leading in the drop in enrollment and some of the reasons why:
---------------
Montgomery County Public Schools experienced one of the steepest declines in enrollment this year, losing about 2% of its population. Superintendent Thomas Taylor said part of the reason is fewer students coming from other countries.
Other political factors may be factoring in, too. Maryland is losing federal jobs faster than any other state, as the Trump administration slashed positions traditionally viewed as stable employment.
Maryland was already losing residents to other states at a high rate in recent years.
“It’s entirely possible that losing 15,000 jobs could have contributed to families having to relocate for other jobs,” Meyer said.
Taylor said skyrocketing housing costs could also be pushing families with young children away.
On top of that, far more families chose to homeschool their children after the pandemic. More than 42,000 kids now learn at home, compared to about 28,000 in 2020.
Private school growth has been far less dramatic since the pandemic. The percentage of Maryland students attending private schools has fluctuated between roughly 12% and 13% since 2017.
--------------------------------------
I think that parents choosing to home school kind of indirectly points to the dissatisfaction with the quality of the school system.