Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in touring parochial and Catholic schools, I've seen low ratios published online but when touring during the school day saw significantly more kids in each classroom! One school advertises 14:1 and the 2 classes we saw were more like 20-22. The only school I saw with class sizes of 12-14 actually appears to be struggling financially and I think they would have class sizes of 20 if they could fill the seats! I know it probably varies by grade, but I can't understand how there can be such a big diff between published and actual ratios.
Because they count the aides. So, a class of 28 has a teacher and an aide and now the ratio is 28:2 or 14:1.
There were no aides in the classrooms I looked at. Do you mean for the kindergarten classes? Is it because there are several teachers like Spanish, 2 PE teachers, Art, and none of those teachers have their own homeroom classes... so the ratio goes down?
Anonymous wrote:in touring parochial and Catholic schools, I've seen low ratios published online but when touring during the school day saw significantly more kids in each classroom! One school advertises 14:1 and the 2 classes we saw were more like 20-22. The only school I saw with class sizes of 12-14 actually appears to be struggling financially and I think they would have class sizes of 20 if they could fill the seats! I know it probably varies by grade, but I can't understand how there can be such a big diff between published and actual ratios.
Anonymous wrote:I wish they just had a maximum and minimum class size cause I don't care about the ratio, I want to know is he going to be chilling with 3 friends all day or lost in a sea of 30?
Anonymous wrote:Student teacher ratio isn't the same as class size. Special teachers, and teacher's aides are counted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in touring parochial and Catholic schools, I've seen low ratios published online but when touring during the school day saw significantly more kids in each classroom! One school advertises 14:1 and the 2 classes we saw were more like 20-22. The only school I saw with class sizes of 12-14 actually appears to be struggling financially and I think they would have class sizes of 20 if they could fill the seats! I know it probably varies by grade, but I can't understand how there can be such a big diff between published and actual ratios.
Because they count the aides. So, a class of 28 has a teacher and an aide and now the ratio is 28:2 or 14:1.
There were no aides in the classrooms I looked at. Do you mean for the kindergarten classes? Is it because there are several teachers like Spanish, 2 PE teachers, Art, and none of those teachers have their own homeroom classes... so the ratio goes down?
Look at the school directory to see how many aides they have per grade.
That's a good tip, I'll do that. Are aides that common in elementary school? I haven't seen them past preK and maybe K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in touring parochial and Catholic schools, I've seen low ratios published online but when touring during the school day saw significantly more kids in each classroom! One school advertises 14:1 and the 2 classes we saw were more like 20-22. The only school I saw with class sizes of 12-14 actually appears to be struggling financially and I think they would have class sizes of 20 if they could fill the seats! I know it probably varies by grade, but I can't understand how there can be such a big diff between published and actual ratios.
Because they count the aides. So, a class of 28 has a teacher and an aide and now the ratio is 28:2 or 14:1.
There were no aides in the classrooms I looked at. Do you mean for the kindergarten classes? Is it because there are several teachers like Spanish, 2 PE teachers, Art, and none of those teachers have their own homeroom classes... so the ratio goes down?
Look at the school directory to see how many aides they have per grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in touring parochial and Catholic schools, I've seen low ratios published online but when touring during the school day saw significantly more kids in each classroom! One school advertises 14:1 and the 2 classes we saw were more like 20-22. The only school I saw with class sizes of 12-14 actually appears to be struggling financially and I think they would have class sizes of 20 if they could fill the seats! I know it probably varies by grade, but I can't understand how there can be such a big diff between published and actual ratios.
Because they count the aides. So, a class of 28 has a teacher and an aide and now the ratio is 28:2 or 14:1.
There were no aides in the classrooms I looked at. Do you mean for the kindergarten classes? Is it because there are several teachers like Spanish, 2 PE teachers, Art, and none of those teachers have their own homeroom classes... so the ratio goes down?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:in touring parochial and Catholic schools, I've seen low ratios published online but when touring during the school day saw significantly more kids in each classroom! One school advertises 14:1 and the 2 classes we saw were more like 20-22. The only school I saw with class sizes of 12-14 actually appears to be struggling financially and I think they would have class sizes of 20 if they could fill the seats! I know it probably varies by grade, but I can't understand how there can be such a big diff between published and actual ratios.
Because they count the aides. So, a class of 28 has a teacher and an aide and now the ratio is 28:2 or 14:1.
Anonymous wrote:in touring parochial and Catholic schools, I've seen low ratios published online but when touring during the school day saw significantly more kids in each classroom! One school advertises 14:1 and the 2 classes we saw were more like 20-22. The only school I saw with class sizes of 12-14 actually appears to be struggling financially and I think they would have class sizes of 20 if they could fill the seats! I know it probably varies by grade, but I can't understand how there can be such a big diff between published and actual ratios.