Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools have different levels of this course? My child’s middle school only has one level of each humanities class in middle school.
There aren’t different levels of the course. There’s on-level (IWS) Global Humanities (HIGH), and, at only two MS, Humanities.
Sorry I don’t understand the above. Humanity focused magnet middle schools aside, do MCPS middle schools have the option of having an on-level humanities course and an above-level humanities course? My child’s school only has one option Historical Inquiries Global Humanities. Thanks
Correct. All middle schools must offer the enriched/above-level social studies courses to students who are centrally identified, and then it is their choice how many other students they want to offer it to, if any. Some schools enroll all kids in it (or all except kids who are below-level/ELL/etc.). Others have continued the standard on-level social studies course for many of their students. Overall about 40% of middle schoolers district-wide are in the enriched social studies classes, but at some schools it may be far more and at others far less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools have different levels of this course? My child’s middle school only has one level of each humanities class in middle school.
There aren’t different levels of the course. There’s on-level (IWS) Global Humanities (HIGH), and, at only two MS, Humanities.
Sorry I don’t understand the above. Humanity focused magnet middle schools aside, do MCPS middle schools have the option of having an on-level humanities course and an above-level humanities course? My child’s school only has one option Historical Inquiries Global Humanities. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools have different levels of this course? My child’s middle school only has one level of each humanities class in middle school.
There aren’t different levels of the course. There’s on-level (IWS) Global Humanities (HIGH), and, at only two MS, Humanities.
Sorry I don’t understand the above. Humanity focused magnet middle schools aside, do MCPS middle schools have the option of having an on-level humanities course and an above-level humanities course? My child’s school only has one option Historical Inquiries Global Humanities. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools have different levels of this course? My child’s middle school only has one level of each humanities class in middle school.
There aren’t different levels of the course. There’s on-level (IWS) Global Humanities (HIGH), and, at only two MS, Humanities.
Sorry I don’t understand the above. Humanity focused magnet middle schools aside, do MCPS middle schools have the option of having an on-level humanities course and an above-level humanities course? My child’s school only has one option Historical Inquiries Global Humanities. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What schools have different levels of this course? My child’s middle school only has one level of each humanities class in middle school.
There aren’t different levels of the course. There’s on-level (IWS) Global Humanities (HIGH), and, at only two MS, Humanities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do the kids get selected for this class? In my kid's school they have World history or Global humanities. One of mine was placed in the World History and the other in Global Humanities. Both were in Adv. English. This was in 6th grade.
Everyone is placed in advanced English - there is no on-level course.
HIGH placement is based on grades and MAP scores. Those who are waitlisted for the humanities MS magnets are placed by central office, and then schools have the discretion to pull more kids in. You could talk to the counselor if you want more info on how your MS approaches it.
Interesting. My kid did get into humanities magnet but rejected the spot for a whole school magnet program and got placed in HIGH. DC said that most of the kids in that class were not out of consortium.
Anonymous wrote:What schools have different levels of this course? My child’s middle school only has one level of each humanities class in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Does this track prepare 8th grade students for the end of year state mandated history/social studies test? How much of class time is spent on covering what's on the test?
Anonymous wrote:The absolute ignorance with which people are dismissing the HIGH books mentioned, and the repeated claims that historical scholarship challenge comes from how hard the source text is to read, not how hard the student thinks about the content, convinces me that these are excellent book choices, that have a chance at producing graduates far more capable of historical scholarship than their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did they select new novels for this course for this school year?
Long walk ti water in mp1
Red scarf girl in mp2
Huh. My kid was assigned to read long walk to water in grade 5. We've relocated from another school district though.