Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, in a nutshell, this is why people put their kids in private schools. At any cost. You're dealing with MCPS. You think it's going to change?
I considered it but they would have lost 2 years of math progress. No private school I visited had math on par to MCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Looking for advice from other MCPS parents. My child is in 6th grade at a school where a language class is required, and we are dealing with a teacher situation that has become incredibly frustrating.
The teacher rarely returns graded work, grades appear subjective with little or no feedback, and neither students nor parents receive responses to emails. Canvas is not updated in a meaningful way, so it is often impossible to tell what assignments are missing or why grades were given. If a student misses class due to illness or another legitimate reason, there is essentially no opportunity to make up missed work or instruction.
There have also been multiple instances of inappropriate or off-topic discussions during class. Most concerning, the teacher recently told students that they are basically done teaching for the year and that the remaining three weeks should be treated as a study hall.
Several parents, including me, have already contacted guidance counselors and school administration, but nothing meaningful has changed. Since raising concerns, I feel my child’s grades have become even worse, with no transparency about how they are being determined and no opportunity for her to learn from mistakes or improve.
At this point I am trying to understand what recourse parents realistically have within MCPS when administration appears unwilling to intervene. Has anyone dealt with something similar? Were you successful escalating to the principal, district office, or Board of Education? I am especially interested in practical next steps and documentation strategies.
Please do not ask me to name the school or teacher publicly.
Anonymous wrote:OP, in a nutshell, this is why people put their kids in private schools. At any cost. You're dealing with MCPS. You think it's going to change?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Contact. Do you have the right email address? Sometimes teachers prefer a specific one, which they usually give out during Back To School Night. Ask the counselor, and CC the Principal, for a meeting with the teacher if you cannot contact them successfully.
2. Grades. See 1.
3. End of year shenanigans. Yes, right now, a lot of teachers are switching to babysitting mode. My son's AP World History teacher apparently didn't teach them all the units, so *after* the AP exam, he went crazy and wanted his students to finish the missing units. This led to my son working through the weekend AFTER the last day of the school year, to get an A in the class. It was nuts, completely nuts. But most teachers are the opposite: they front load so they can relax a bit at the end of the year.
3. Why are you suddenly waking up now? May 28 isn't the time when anyone is going to be responsive, OP. This is on the parents, too. The time for establishing contact with a problematic teacher is in the first semester.
I have done 1 and 2 since tbe start of the quarter. Let my child handle it through guidance in quarter 3 when we realized this was not a situation she could just do her best and get through. She has documented emails and appointments where she requested a teacher change. Since the start of quarter 4, I got involved. I reached out to the teacher 3 times over email, then twice with guidance copied, emailed the grade level VP and had a phone conference. Nothing has changed. Now I want to ensure that no other students has their love of school and this language crushed by this unprofessional POS, to be quite frank.
Anonymous wrote:1. Contact. Do you have the right email address? Sometimes teachers prefer a specific one, which they usually give out during Back To School Night. Ask the counselor, and CC the Principal, for a meeting with the teacher if you cannot contact them successfully.
2. Grades. See 1.
3. End of year shenanigans. Yes, right now, a lot of teachers are switching to babysitting mode. My son's AP World History teacher apparently didn't teach them all the units, so *after* the AP exam, he went crazy and wanted his students to finish the missing units. This led to my son working through the weekend AFTER the last day of the school year, to get an A in the class. It was nuts, completely nuts. But most teachers are the opposite: they front load so they can relax a bit at the end of the year.
3. Why are you suddenly waking up now? May 28 isn't the time when anyone is going to be responsive, OP. This is on the parents, too. The time for establishing contact with a problematic teacher is in the first semester.
Anonymous wrote:That was our experience in HS with a language teacher and my kid dropped language as that teacher would be their teacher the following year. Best thing we did was get an online tutor to strengthen that language.
