Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is common for most (if not all) middle schools. 8th grade instruction ends after promotion. Students are always welcome to come to school - and some do - but it is very common for many to be released. As a former teacher, we would love to keep things going but after the grueling spring testing for 8th graders and then final projects, they are done. They are still kids, not little robots.
Because they’re not little robots, it would have been nice for students to do some projects with teachers that inspire their love of learning for the subject rather than linking directly to a test score. My elementary school kid did fun STEM projects today while my middle school kid was told to…stay home.
Agree! This would be an awesome time to do things like.... Integrate cooking into a chemistry lesson. Spend time outside and learn something about nature for biology. Read and create comics for a combined English and art class. Build LEGO robots. All the STEM things with the wow factor, like Elephant Toothpaste.
Invite professionals in to talk about a day in the life of a
Judge
Lawyer
Baker
Journalist
Mechanic
Retail manager
Psychologist
Landscaper
Actor
Researcher
Accountant
Grocery worker
Child care professional
Entrepreneur
Farmer
Etc etc etc especially random careers people might not have heard of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t 8th graders have their promotion ceremony already? Why would they go to school?
Ideally because they're 8th graders and not HS graduates who are done with MCPS.
And they're ideally supposed to be getting 180 days of instruction, or however many they're getting this year with the snow day waivers.
And maybe not at Westland but maybe some of them count on the school for meals or have nothing to do at home during the day. True they're 8th graders and older now. But families probably didn't plan for it.
Unfortunately, many 8th graders will come just to run around and act out. Not all, but there is a "We graduated and can't get into trouble" attitude. No matter how many times you explain it is not a graduation and they can still get into trouble, they just don't care anymore. Some kids are great, but the school year does have to come to end.
That’s ridiculous. Kids who don’t have disciplinary issues aren’t going to magically misbehave because they have been passed onto 9th grade. This is just an excuse for the teachers who choose to be lazy not to teach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is common for most (if not all) middle schools. 8th grade instruction ends after promotion. Students are always welcome to come to school - and some do - but it is very common for many to be released. As a former teacher, we would love to keep things going but after the grueling spring testing for 8th graders and then final projects, they are done. They are still kids, not little robots.
Because they’re not little robots, it would have been nice for students to do some projects with teachers that inspire their love of learning for the subject rather than linking directly to a test score. My elementary school kid did fun STEM projects today while my middle school kid was told to…stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t 8th graders have their promotion ceremony already? Why would they go to school?
Ideally because they're 8th graders and not HS graduates who are done with MCPS.
And they're ideally supposed to be getting 180 days of instruction, or however many they're getting this year with the snow day waivers.
And maybe not at Westland but maybe some of them count on the school for meals or have nothing to do at home during the day. True they're 8th graders and older now. But families probably didn't plan for it.
Unfortunately, many 8th graders will come just to run around and act out. Not all, but there is a "We graduated and can't get into trouble" attitude. No matter how many times you explain it is not a graduation and they can still get into trouble, they just don't care anymore. Some kids are great, but the school year does have to come to end.
That’s ridiculous. Kids who don’t have disciplinary issues aren’t going to magically misbehave because they have been passed onto 9th grade. This is just an excuse for the teachers who choose to be lazy not to teach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t 8th graders have their promotion ceremony already? Why would they go to school?
Ideally because they're 8th graders and not HS graduates who are done with MCPS.
And they're ideally supposed to be getting 180 days of instruction, or however many they're getting this year with the snow day waivers.
And maybe not at Westland but maybe some of them count on the school for meals or have nothing to do at home during the day. True they're 8th graders and older now. But families probably didn't plan for it.
Unfortunately, many 8th graders will come just to run around and act out. Not all, but there is a "We graduated and can't get into trouble" attitude. No matter how many times you explain it is not a graduation and they can still get into trouble, they just don't care anymore. Some kids are great, but the school year does have to come to end.
Anonymous wrote:This is common for most (if not all) middle schools. 8th grade instruction ends after promotion. Students are always welcome to come to school - and some do - but it is very common for many to be released. As a former teacher, we would love to keep things going but after the grueling spring testing for 8th graders and then final projects, they are done. They are still kids, not little robots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t 8th graders have their promotion ceremony already? Why would they go to school?
Ideally because they're 8th graders and not HS graduates who are done with MCPS.
And they're ideally supposed to be getting 180 days of instruction, or however many they're getting this year with the snow day waivers.
And maybe not at Westland but maybe some of them count on the school for meals or have nothing to do at home during the day. True they're 8th graders and older now. But families probably didn't plan for it.
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t 8th graders have their promotion ceremony already? Why would they go to school?
Anonymous wrote:Didn’t 8th graders have their promotion ceremony already? Why would they go to school?