Anonymous wrote:this shows that schools need to be busting their ass to attract and retain high SES/high achieving families. The schools and teachers are going to depend on those super stars to save their ass. If teachers and schools are going to be judged on PARCC scores they better come up with some incentive to keep these populations. My kid is only in PS and I am already frustrated with our IB lousy test scores and disastrous PTA organization. And my kid is exactly the kind of kid they need to take the PARCC on third grade but we will, along with our counterparts, will all have moved on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this shows that schools need to be busting their ass to attract and retain high SES/high achieving families. The schools and teachers are going to depend on those super stars to save their ass. If teachers and schools are going to be judged on PARCC scores they better come up with some incentive to keep these populations. My kid is only in PS and I am already frustrated with our IB lousy test scores and disastrous PTA organization. And my kid is exactly the kind of kid they need to take the PARCC on third grade but we will, along with our counterparts, will all have moved on.
lol, no. sorry dear, there is no market for "high SES" families in DCPS. It does not work that way. If you expect to be catered to, move to MD or VA.
Anonymous wrote:this shows that schools need to be busting their ass to attract and retain high SES/high achieving families. The schools and teachers are going to depend on those super stars to save their ass. If teachers and schools are going to be judged on PARCC scores they better come up with some incentive to keep these populations. My kid is only in PS and I am already frustrated with our IB lousy test scores and disastrous PTA organization. And my kid is exactly the kind of kid they need to take the PARCC on third grade but we will, along with our counterparts, will all have moved on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At my child's HS (not Wilson) there's enough school pride that most kids take PARCC seriously.
These kids have more on their minds than school pride. Like doing well on tests that actually matter.
Anonymous wrote:At my child's HS (not Wilson) there's enough school pride that most kids take PARCC seriously.
Anonymous wrote:This should horrify every administration because there's no reason for this not to continue.
There is zero incentive for the students to do well on these tests and I can't blame them for prioritizing schoolwork that matters over the tests.
I appreciate Jennifer Niles' quotations in the article.