Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think immersion programs have a good shot at surviving. Especially the two-way immersion programs, which have pretty mixed-to-poor academic results.
I think (hope?) the OWI programs will survive one way or another. These are very old programs.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that it's a real possibility they will eliminate these programs. The Office of Shared Accountability put out a report early last year about the Two Way Immersion programs and some negative outcomes in them. I think they are setting the stage to eliminate them. I hope they don't and instead figure out how to properly support these programs (the report noted a ton of problems with the implementation), but they cost money to support. And if they are trying to make opportunities the same across the county (an equality model, not an equity model) these programs are not evenly distributed.
Anonymous wrote:My child is in an elementary language immersion program in a school that is not in our region in any of the proposed models. Further, the middle school they feed into is also not in our region.
Has anyone seen any information on what is going to happen to kids who are supposed to be going into middle school the year the regional model is implemented?
Won't be applicable to me, but what about the younger elementary immersion kids? Do they get to stay in their ES?
Anonymous wrote:My child is in an elementary language immersion program in a school that is not in our region in any of the proposed models. Further, the middle school they feed into is also not in our region.
Has anyone seen any information on what is going to happen to kids who are supposed to be going into middle school the year the regional model is implemented?
Won't be applicable to me, but what about the younger elementary immersion kids? Do they get to stay in their ES?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's possible middle school immersion programs will go away entirely in 2027 unless the state requirement of 60 minutes a day of math in middle school gets overturned, because MCPS may have to cut back to only one elective period per year for middle schoolers and there may not be enough demand/interest in middle school foreign language/immersion anymore to run the programs (or offer foreign language in middle school at all) if it means kids can't take band or any other elective for all of middle school as a result. (If that concerns you, tell MSDE to change the rules and tell MCPS to ask them to.)
But this is all very TBD.
I don’t think all the immersion middle schools have block scheduling? I know SSIMS does, but for example does Westland?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's possible middle school immersion programs will go away entirely in 2027 unless the state requirement of 60 minutes a day of math in middle school gets overturned, because MCPS may have to cut back to only one elective period per year for middle schoolers and there may not be enough demand/interest in middle school foreign language/immersion anymore to run the programs (or offer foreign language in middle school at all) if it means kids can't take band or any other elective for all of middle school as a result. (If that concerns you, tell MSDE to change the rules and tell MCPS to ask them to.)
But this is all very TBD.
I don’t think all the immersion middle schools have block scheduling? I know SSIMS does, but for example does Westland?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think immersion programs have a good shot at surviving. Especially the two-way immersion programs, which have pretty mixed-to-poor academic results.
Anonymous wrote:It's possible middle school immersion programs will go away entirely in 2027 unless the state requirement of 60 minutes a day of math in middle school gets overturned, because MCPS may have to cut back to only one elective period per year for middle schoolers and there may not be enough demand/interest in middle school foreign language/immersion anymore to run the programs (or offer foreign language in middle school at all) if it means kids can't take band or any other elective for all of middle school as a result. (If that concerns you, tell MSDE to change the rules and tell MCPS to ask them to.)
But this is all very TBD.