Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, MCPS is being incredibly short-sighted by refusing to let any distance or on-line learning take place. I understand that access will be a problem for some students. However, by putting a stop to any learning of new material or feedback from teachers, or assesments of any kind, no child is served. Some parents who are lucky enough to have resources and time will provide lots of enrichment for their kids for as long as this lasts. They will find activities and make sure their kids stay on track academically. These kids will end up ahead of grade level. Some kids have parents that are still working, or are in difficult family situations without any adult support at home. These children will suffer with no support from MCPS. When they all come back, whenever that might be, I'm afraid that the achievement gap will be even bigger. For fear of looking inequitable, MCPS is harming more students than it would if it would just transition to online learning for whoever can access it and then try to help the folks that have trouble with access. Not to mention, the "work" that is online, at least for Elementary school, is complete dreck. Am I off base with this? I'm just disgusted by how MCPS is handling this. Everyone loses.
+100
I’m tired of MCPS using the achievement gap as an excuse to be mediocre and fail the vast majority of families they are supposed to be serving.
How the hell would you grade and assess kids who are unable to access the curriculum? Do you just hold them back end mass?
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't worsen when there is no academics for everyone. The issue is the W and some other schools get far better resources in terms of AP and honors classes and "better" teachers because of the population they serve. They aren't going to ever close the gap as far more resources need to go to those who are struggling and many kids just slide through elementary school without the help they need (regardless of the school) and that gap continues to grow when in middle and high school they don't have the basic math and reading skills they need to succeed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, MCPS is being incredibly short-sighted by refusing to let any distance or on-line learning take place. I understand that access will be a problem for some students. However, by putting a stop to any learning of new material or feedback from teachers, or assesments of any kind, no child is served. Some parents who are lucky enough to have resources and time will provide lots of enrichment for their kids for as long as this lasts. They will find activities and make sure their kids stay on track academically. These kids will end up ahead of grade level. Some kids have parents that are still working, or are in difficult family situations without any adult support at home. These children will suffer with no support from MCPS. When they all come back, whenever that might be, I'm afraid that the achievement gap will be even bigger. For fear of looking inequitable, MCPS is harming more students than it would if it would just transition to online learning for whoever can access it and then try to help the folks that have trouble with access. Not to mention, the "work" that is online, at least for Elementary school, is complete dreck. Am I off base with this? I'm just disgusted by how MCPS is handling this. Everyone loses.
+100
I’m tired of MCPS using the achievement gap as an excuse to be mediocre and fail the vast majority of families they are supposed to be serving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, MCPS is being incredibly short-sighted by refusing to let any distance or on-line learning take place. I understand that access will be a problem for some students. However, by putting a stop to any learning of new material or feedback from teachers, or assesments of any kind, no child is served. Some parents who are lucky enough to have resources and time will provide lots of enrichment for their kids for as long as this lasts. They will find activities and make sure their kids stay on track academically. These kids will end up ahead of grade level. Some kids have parents that are still working, or are in difficult family situations without any adult support at home. These children will suffer with no support from MCPS. When they all come back, whenever that might be, I'm afraid that the achievement gap will be even bigger. For fear of looking inequitable, MCPS is harming more students than it would if it would just transition to online learning for whoever can access it and then try to help the folks that have trouble with access. Not to mention, the "work" that is online, at least for Elementary school, is complete dreck. Am I off base with this? I'm just disgusted by how MCPS is handling this. Everyone loses.
+100
I’m tired of MCPS using the achievement gap as an excuse to be mediocre and fail the vast majority of families they are supposed to be serving.[/quot
Agree. Lame way to follow the lowest common denominator, no matter what.
MCPS is claiming the achievement gap is closing because they are providing lunch ....(and will be dinner) at selected MS and HS (20 locations. They claimed that they served 18k meals in 3 days (conservatively assumed). That is 6 thousands meal a day in all 20 locations. 300 kids at each location in that 3 hrs (11am-1pm). That is 100 hundred kids each hr. What achievement gap are u all talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, MCPS is being incredibly short-sighted by refusing to let any distance or on-line learning take place. I understand that access will be a problem for some students. However, by putting a stop to any learning of new material or feedback from teachers, or assesments of any kind, no child is served. Some parents who are lucky enough to have resources and time will provide lots of enrichment for their kids for as long as this lasts. They will find activities and make sure their kids stay on track academically. These kids will end up ahead of grade level. Some kids have parents that are still working, or are in difficult family situations without any adult support at home. These children will suffer with no support from MCPS. When they all come back, whenever that might be, I'm afraid that the achievement gap will be even bigger. For fear of looking inequitable, MCPS is harming more students than it would if it would just transition to online learning for whoever can access it and then try to help the folks that have trouble with access. Not to mention, the "work" that is online, at least for Elementary school, is complete dreck. Am I off base with this? I'm just disgusted by how MCPS is handling this. Everyone loses.
+100
I’m tired of MCPS using the achievement gap as an excuse to be mediocre and fail the vast majority of families they are supposed to be serving.[/quot
Agree. Lame way to follow the lowest common denominator, no matter what.
Anonymous wrote:In my opinion, MCPS is being incredibly short-sighted by refusing to let any distance or on-line learning take place. I understand that access will be a problem for some students. However, by putting a stop to any learning of new material or feedback from teachers, or assesments of any kind, no child is served. Some parents who are lucky enough to have resources and time will provide lots of enrichment for their kids for as long as this lasts. They will find activities and make sure their kids stay on track academically. These kids will end up ahead of grade level. Some kids have parents that are still working, or are in difficult family situations without any adult support at home. These children will suffer with no support from MCPS. When they all come back, whenever that might be, I'm afraid that the achievement gap will be even bigger. For fear of looking inequitable, MCPS is harming more students than it would if it would just transition to online learning for whoever can access it and then try to help the folks that have trouble with access. Not to mention, the "work" that is online, at least for Elementary school, is complete dreck. Am I off base with this? I'm just disgusted by how MCPS is handling this. Everyone loses.
Anonymous wrote:If kids need chrome books they may not have internet access either. A lot of families don’t use email, which their internet access is purely off of mobile phones. Sometimes that can be shared, sometimes not.