Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
Carson is unique in that sense - my older child went there and I was impressed with their paper use. However, my other child goes to Franklin and both English and History are majority digital. Science has done digital, some paper.
This is why I'm so pissed that the RIO parents want to send our children to Franklin. We love Carson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
Carson is unique in that sense - my older child went there and I was impressed with their paper use. However, my other child goes to Franklin and both English and History are majority digital. Science has done digital, some paper.
This is why I'm so pissed that the RIO parents want to send our children to Franklin. We love Carson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
Carson is unique in that sense - my older child went there and I was impressed with their paper use. However, my other child goes to Franklin and both English and History are majority digital. Science has done digital, some paper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is at Marshall now, but this was not his experience at Kilmer.
I had a kid at Kilmer/Marshall a while back, and it absolutely happened at Kilmer. The only time the kids ever saw the principal (she left a year later) was when she occasionally emerged to yell at the kids not to touch each other in the halls between classes.
My son is a freshman at Marshall so our experience is more recent. That said my son was in aap, so his experience may have been different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
Carson is unique in that sense - my older child went there and I was impressed with their paper use. However, my other child goes to Franklin and both English and History are majority digital. Science has done digital, some paper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is at Marshall now, but this was not his experience at Kilmer.
I had a kid at Kilmer/Marshall a while back, and it absolutely happened at Kilmer. The only time the kids ever saw the principal (she left a year later) was when she occasionally emerged to yell at the kids not to touch each other in the halls between classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
I don't ever see my carson kid doing anything on paper other than a drawing for civics, but then again he never does homework at home.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know what happened with the busses today?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
np. We have teachers at Longfellow that use those materials.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
No one is using 99% of the Covid materials. Try again.
+100, those materials aren’t even available anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
I don't ever see my carson kid doing anything on paper other than a drawing for civics, but then again he never does homework at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.
I have two kids at Carson, almost all of their work is on paper. Nobody is using online materials from 5 years ago. Your snowflake should have recovered from Covid right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it’s getting old to keep pointing to Covid, but I genuinely think this particular cohort—mostly the current 7th graders, also likely some current 6th and 8th graders—missed a key window of social development after spending a full year in virtual school (for today’s 7th graders, that meant the second half of 1st grade and almost all of 2nd). At my DC’s elementary school, the administration could not wait for that 6th grade group to move on because their collective behavior was the worst they’d seen, and that same cohort came back noticeably more challenging in 3rd grade than they had been in 1st. I don’t have a student at Carson, but at another FCPS middle school, horseplay seems to be pretty common. This isn’t to excuse the behavior, just to offer a possible explanation for why it seems to be increasing.
Nope. Get a new excuse.
Next!
We will get a new excuse when you stop using the online materials from virtual learning.