Anonymous wrote:I don't know. My kid is in third grade and this weeks' spelling list includes the words mischief, insincere and mischievous. He has to write an essay every week about a book he's reading. They have substantial math homework every night, plus cursive 2x each week. Interesting work on the constitution and the bill of rights seems to be happening in social studies. They just did two science experiments on gravity. The coursework seems appropriately challenging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know. My kid is in third grade and this weeks' spelling list includes the words mischief, insincere and mischievous. He has to write an essay every week about a book he's reading. They have substantial math homework every night, plus cursive 2x each week. Interesting work on the constitution and the bill of rights seems to be happening in social studies. They just did two science experiments on gravity. The coursework seems appropriately challenging.
I find it interesting how amount and level of home work differ from school to school within MCPS. I have made my peace with the quality and quantity of "after-school clubs" that schools offer because the parents pay for it (example - the insane variety and choices that is available in Chevy Chase ES) but what MCPS itself provides should be uniform don't you think?
What do you mean, make your peace with quality and quantity of after school clubs? Aren't you glad your school has lots of options? Sounds good to me, my kids don't have those options.
According to who? I understand spiraling curriculum, but no new material for a whole grade. That's ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In general even grade s are review years and odd grades are learning years. Couple that with it being the start of the year. Talk to the teacher about differentiation options.
According to who? I understand spiraling curriculum, but no new material for a whole grade. That's ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:In general even grade s are review years and odd grades are learning years. Couple that with it being the start of the year. Talk to the teacher about differentiation options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know. My kid is in third grade and this weeks' spelling list includes the words mischief, insincere and mischievous. He has to write an essay every week about a book he's reading. They have substantial math homework every night, plus cursive 2x each week. Interesting work on the constitution and the bill of rights seems to be happening in social studies. They just did two science experiments on gravity. The coursework seems appropriately challenging.
I find it interesting how amount and level of home work differ from school to school within MCPS. I have made my peace with the quality and quantity of "after-school clubs" that schools offer because the parents pay for it (example - the insane variety and choices that is available in Chevy Chase ES) but what MCPS itself provides should be uniform don't you think?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know. My kid is in third grade and this weeks' spelling list includes the words mischief, insincere and mischievous. He has to write an essay every week about a book he's reading. They have substantial math homework every night, plus cursive 2x each week. Interesting work on the constitution and the bill of rights seems to be happening in social studies. They just did two science experiments on gravity. The coursework seems appropriately challenging.
Anonymous wrote:We moved over the summer from Southern VA where DD9 had been in private school since K. We were excited to be able to put her in public schools considering all the great things we've heard about MCPS. Well, here we are >1 month in and I'm perplexed by what she is bringing home from 4th grade. Most of what she is doing is review (I know that's typical in the start of a school year) but some is downright ridiculous. Her spelling words this week include came, some and page. These words are on the Dolch Pre-K list! Is there something I'm missing here or is MCPS just doing great on tests because the bar is set low? She never got tested for HGT since we were in a non-testing school. Is this something I need to ask for now? For a child that is reading 1-2 chapter books a week, I worry about the dumbing down of her education.