Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know anything about the academic rigor at Potomac, but as a former Langley teacher, I was surprised at the low expectations for most of the middle school students. Of course, there were a number that were working at a higher level, but that had more to do with the families from which they were coming, than the education they had received at the school. I was expecting the student who had access to so many opportunities to be operating at a higher level and had adjusted my curriculum accordingly. I had to drop the added rigor for most students, and strongly support writing skills, which were abysmal. I suspect that the new administration will help correct much of this and feel strongly that Langley has a lot of positive things going for it (their art program, exposure to a variety of subjects and ideas, and technology integration for example, as well as the fact that most of the students actually enjoy going to school, which says a lot), but I would not describe their academic program as rigorous.
I hope you are not an English teacher. Your writing style is abysmal.
Anonymous wrote:NCS is well-known for cut throat academics. Expect Langley to follow suit?
Anonymous wrote:I don't know anything about the academic rigor at Potomac, but as a former Langley teacher, I was surprised at the low expectations for most of the middle school students. Of course, there were a number that were working at a higher level, but that had more to do with the families from which they were coming, than the education they had received at the school. I was expecting the student who had access to so many opportunities to be operating at a higher level and had adjusted my curriculum accordingly. I had to drop the added rigor for most students, and strongly support writing skills, which were abysmal. I suspect that the new administration will help correct much of this and feel strongly that Langley has a lot of positive things going for it (their art program, exposure to a variety of subjects and ideas, and technology integration for example, as well as the fact that most of the students actually enjoy going to school, which says a lot), but I would not describe their academic program as rigorous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:... individual instruction for the one child who is reading at an 8th grade level in 1st grade or doing multiplication in K. ....
If you have one of these, there is no independent school in the DC area that you will be happy with.
Anonymous wrote:We are in the lower school. I find that Langley does differentiate pretty well, but isn't great with kids at extreme levels of the learning spectrum. Starting in 5th grade, the curriculum gets pretty advanced, but parents looking for something like AAP in earlier grades will probably be frustrated. Yes they differentiate but they can't do individual instruction for the one child who is reading at an 8th grade level in 1st grade or doing multiplication in K. The teaches are dedicated and the kids enjoy school and learn a lot. As years progress writing becomes important and they stress strong writing and presentation skills. By the time they hit middle school the program seems quite rigorous and they apparently do very well in exmissions.
They do well with offering a variety of specials, and have a great arts and music program and great facilities. They are somewhat weak at sports because they lack a pool and tennis courts, but they do well enough with the sports they offer. JV sports starts at 5th grade, which I think is earlier than Potomac. Most kids play on area sports leagues or swim programs anyway if they are interested in those sports, so I'm not sure many people are looking for more sports to be offered through the school.