Anonymous wrote:I would fire the dead weight and dysfunctional core in the division of long range planning. The capacity problems have become virtually unfixable thanks to the outdated thinking that dept brings to the table. At least with curriculum we can adapt and try to improve when a good idea fails in application. The consequences of poor facilities planning is turning mcps into a joke.
I , honestly, would rely on my experience and training as an educator and ignore all suggestions from parents.
Anonymous wrote:Segregate kids based on subject mastery. They do this to some extent with reading, but not enough for math and science.
Zero tolerance bullying. Create a school for troublemakers with teachers that have experience dealing with them.
Test into kindergarten. Require kids that dont pass to attend pre-k for special instruction.
2 recess period
Healthier lunches
Supplemental packets for struggling or high achieving kids.
After school programs for at risk students needing more tutoring.
And what will be done with these worksheets you propose? Raise taxes to pay for grading assistants to score them and then recommend the next level of worksheets?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would -
1) Make sure that Math curriculum was made clearer, have textbooks that followed the curriculum, give a week-by-week breakup of what would be covered in class, make this available to parents, students and teachers before the school year (during summer) - a complete quarter-by-quarter breakdown of what was being taught.
2) Teach History chronologically.
what would you do?
You mean each grade learns a different part of history? So the middle schoolers are learning ancient history?
Anonymous wrote:Find another job....
Anonymous wrote:Segregate kids based on subject mastery. They do this to some extent with reading, but not enough for math and science.
Zero tolerance bullying. Create a school for troublemakers with teachers that have experience dealing with them.
Test into kindergarten. Require kids that dont pass to attend pre-k for special instruction.
2 recess period
Healthier lunches
Supplemental packets for struggling or high achieving kids.
After school programs for at risk students needing more tutoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would -
1) Make sure that Math curriculum was made clearer, have textbooks that followed the curriculum, give a week-by-week breakup of what would be covered in class, make this available to parents, students and teachers before the school year (during summer) - a complete quarter-by-quarter breakdown of what was being taught.
2) Teach History chronologically.
what would you do?
You mean each grade learns a different part of history? So the middle schoolers are learning ancient history?
Anonymous wrote:I would -
1) Make sure that Math curriculum was made clearer, have textbooks that followed the curriculum, give a week-by-week breakup of what would be covered in class, make this available to parents, students and teachers before the school year (during summer) - a complete quarter-by-quarter breakdown of what was being taught.
2) Teach History chronologically.
what would you do?