Anonymous wrote:I was told directly by a Deal English teacher that they were told to cut books in favor of short common lit passages. The only book assigned all year in 7th grade was Brown Girl Dreaming. Neal’s been around forever. Why she doesn’t use her position to advocate for strong curriculum is beyond me. The people downtown haven’t taught in years (if they’ve taught at all). We should be pushing back against their nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have your kid take APUSH in HS. My kid said that class taught her how to write at JR. All her English teachers sucked.
Same for my DC at a different DCPS HS. It's maddening that so many of the ELA teachers are weak!
It's not that they are weak, but the amount of work required to give decent feedback and editing for 100+ students is astronomical. All the other subjects can scale relatively well, but not English. Teaching writing simply demands more teacher hours per kid.
On the plus side, Deal math is decently strong.
Anonymous wrote:Common lit is terrible for kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have your kid take APUSH in HS. My kid said that class taught her how to write at JR. All her English teachers sucked.
Same for my DC at a different DCPS HS. It's maddening that so many of the ELA teachers are weak!
Anonymous wrote:Have your kid take APUSH in HS. My kid said that class taught her how to write at JR. All her English teachers sucked.
Anonymous wrote:Have your kid take APUSH in HS. My kid said that class taught her how to write at JR. All her English teachers sucked.
Anonymous wrote:My kids went through Deal and Banneker. They’re now in college and both have remarked that their English professors said they were good writers. I didn’t think they were great writers at Deal but I realized I expected them to write at a higher level (like age inappropriate level). It might be you expecting college level writing from a 7th grader or your kid may not like writing so hasn’t put much effort into it. Every kid is different.