Anonymous wrote:M DS was in CCPCS from 1st-8th grade, from when the school was brand new. DD left after 6th grade.
I really like the elementary school (Pre-K through 4th or 5th), but didn't feel like the middle school and higher was very strong.
I think at that point, Cap City's dedication to not following the norm hurts the students more then it helps, their grading schemes become much more confusing, and some of the innovation is not beneficial to the students.
This is not to say I dislike CCPCS, I love their elementary school and I know many excelant teachers there, just that (as I told them when they were expanding into middle and high school grades) I don't think many of their methods translate well into upper grades where the goal is to prepare students for college and the workforce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:M DS was in CCPCS from 1st-8th grade, from when the school was brand new. DD left after 6th grade.
I really like the elementary school (Pre-K through 4th or 5th), but didn't feel like the middle school and higher was very strong.
I think at that point, Cap City's dedication to not following the norm hurts the students more then it helps, their grading schemes become much more confusing, and some of the innovation is not beneficial to the students.
This is not to say I dislike CCPCS, I love their elementary school and I know many excelant teachers there, just that (as I told them when they were expanding into middle and high school grades) I don't think many of their methods translate well into upper grades where the goal is to prepare students for college and the workforce.
OP specifically asked for parents of CURRENT middle school students. Clearly that's not you. But go ahead because we all need to hear your opinion that references an experience from years ago, well before the move to Peabody.![]()
Anonymous wrote:M DS was in CCPCS from 1st-8th grade, from when the school was brand new. DD left after 6th grade.
I really like the elementary school (Pre-K through 4th or 5th), but didn't feel like the middle school and higher was very strong.
I think at that point, Cap City's dedication to not following the norm hurts the students more then it helps, their grading schemes become much more confusing, and some of the innovation is not beneficial to the students.
This is not to say I dislike CCPCS, I love their elementary school and I know many excelant teachers there, just that (as I told them when they were expanding into middle and high school grades) I don't think many of their methods translate well into upper grades where the goal is to prepare students for college and the workforce.
Anonymous wrote:Since the PP mentioned grades, I will note that this is one thing that has really changed in the new MS. Quarterly, students receive a detailed standards-based report for each subject, with an overall grade for the subject, as well as a long list of scores for each of the quarter's benchmarks in that subject. So you get a quite detailed picture of the particular areas where your kid excels and where he/she needs further work. In addition, most teachers send out a less-detailed progress report. Some teachers use that as an occasion to alert students about the hw they have missed or failed to turn in. So in comparison to the old LS, the school is now much more transparent and informative about how students are being evaluated.