Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:say you live in Montgomery County, which has an excellent public school system
Montgomery County does not have an excellent school system. Its mediocre at best but getting worse each year. In the past few years it has gone down hill fast. Class sizes exploded a few years ago and 2.0 is the biggest disaster. The new Algebra 2.0 was such a disaster that MCPS inflated all test scores to bring everyone up to last year's failure rate. 32% of middle school kids and 82% of high school kids failed before the grade inflation. Several ES schools in Churchill and Wootton are seeing enrollment declines for the first time in years. It isn't because houses are not being sold to people with kids.
Montgomery County is becoming what NW DC used to be..a residential community with good houses but if you can afford it, you do private.
Lol, if you think MCPS is mediocre I hope you never leave the "DC Metro area" bubble...
It is mediocre. My daughter is in the highest reading level in 2nd grade and her teacher constantly tells us she has promise. Her cousin who attends a top school in Anne Arundel County dances circles around her. her cousin goes to a mostly white school. They are ok with the lack of diversity because honestly, how many times are you going to need to interact with someone who isn't similar to you later in life???? Diversity isn't that important to me either because i see it is adding no value to my daughter's education - she is in a very diverse school.
Yes. I feel that MCPS is living off of its reputation from 20+ years ago. It's a large bureaucracy that is slow to adapt to the world around it. That was part of our reason for going private.
yes, MCPS are mediocre though they were once outstanding. Many, many here think (wish?) things never change. MCPS is a prime example of what happens when the interests of the teacher's unions take precedence over the interests of the students. Perception lags reality, but you can't fool people for ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:say you live in Montgomery County, which has an excellent public school system
Montgomery County does not have an excellent school system. Its mediocre at best but getting worse each year. In the past few years it has gone down hill fast. Class sizes exploded a few years ago and 2.0 is the biggest disaster. The new Algebra 2.0 was such a disaster that MCPS inflated all test scores to bring everyone up to last year's failure rate. 32% of middle school kids and 82% of high school kids failed before the grade inflation. Several ES schools in Churchill and Wootton are seeing enrollment declines for the first time in years. It isn't because houses are not being sold to people with kids.
Montgomery County is becoming what NW DC used to be..a residential community with good houses but if you can afford it, you do private.
Lol, if you think MCPS is mediocre I hope you never leave the "DC Metro area" bubble...
It is mediocre. My daughter is in the highest reading level in 2nd grade and her teacher constantly tells us she has promise. Her cousin who attends a top school in Anne Arundel County dances circles around her. her cousin goes to a mostly white school. They are ok with the lack of diversity because honestly, how many times are you going to need to interact with someone who isn't similar to you later in life???? Diversity isn't that important to me either because i see it is adding no value to my daughter's education - she is in a very diverse school.
Part of Langley Park is in Montgomery County and the other in Prince George's. Just like Laurel sits in parts of Montgomery, Anne Arundel, Prince George's, and Howard counties.Anonymous wrote:
No, it doesn't. It is the "whites only" category. Not to mention that Langley Park is not in Montgomery County.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is mediocre. That is why all the affluent, educated, white people are leaving.
The white population of Montgomery County is actually increasing.
White population of Montgomery County, 2010 (Census): 558,358
White population of Montgomery County, 2013 (American Community Survey): 636,440
FYI - it helps to use the same data source when comparing data points over time. Decennial Census surveys every household - ACS doesn't and is based on sampling framework.
Part of Langley Park is in Montgomery County and the other in Prince George's. Just like Laurel sits in parts of Montgomery, Anne Arundel, Prince George's, and Howard counties.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is mediocre. That is why all the affluent, educated, white people are leaving.
The white population of Montgomery County is actually increasing.
White population of Montgomery County, 2010 (Census): 558,358
White population of Montgomery County, 2013 (American Community Survey): 636,440
This doesn't show the rate at which the new white folk enroll their kids in public school vs private school, though. Has this rate changed in the last 3 years? The last 5 or 10?
Also -- and I personally believe this to be critically important when discussing montgomery county changing demographics -- that us census designated group "white people" includes new Latino immigrants in Langley park, Wheaton, etc.
No, it doesn't. It is the "whites only" category. Not to mention that Langley Park is not in Montgomery County.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not very unusual for MCPS elementary classes in the younger years to have 16-18 students. My son's was like that for 3 years in a row so not a fluke.
Yes, child #1's class size was 17-18 students for K-3. Not in a Title I/Focus school, either. Child #2's class size has been 22-23 in the same school. I think that a class size of 30 is probably quite atypical in MCPS elementary schools.
Are those class sizes with one teacher, or two?
One. No assistant either.
Anonymous wrote:also OP- depending where you are in DC, many people consider some DC schools to be equal to, or superior, to MoCo these days. Just ask the hive here about 2.0...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is mediocre. My daughter is in the highest reading level in 2nd grade and her teacher constantly tells us she has promise. Her cousin who attends a top school in Anne Arundel County dances circles around her. her cousin goes to a mostly white school. They are ok with the lack of diversity because honestly, how many times are you going to need to interact with someone who isn't similar to you later in life???? Diversity isn't that important to me either because i see it is adding no value to my daughter's education - she is in a very diverse school.
Constantly, unless you go to great trouble to avoid it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is mediocre. That is why all the affluent, educated, white people are leaving.
The white population of Montgomery County is actually increasing.
White population of Montgomery County, 2010 (Census): 558,358
White population of Montgomery County, 2013 (American Community Survey): 636,440
Anonymous wrote:
It is mediocre. My daughter is in the highest reading level in 2nd grade and her teacher constantly tells us she has promise. Her cousin who attends a top school in Anne Arundel County dances circles around her. her cousin goes to a mostly white school. They are ok with the lack of diversity because honestly, how many times are you going to need to interact with someone who isn't similar to you later in life???? Diversity isn't that important to me either because i see it is adding no value to my daughter's education - she is in a very diverse school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is mediocre. That is why all the affluent, educated, white people are leaving.
The white population of Montgomery County is actually increasing.
White population of Montgomery County, 2010 (Census): 558,358
White population of Montgomery County, 2013 (American Community Survey): 636,440
This doesn't show the rate at which the new white folk enroll their kids in public school vs private school, though. Has this rate changed in the last 3 years? The last 5 or 10?
Also -- and I personally believe this to be critically important when discussing montgomery county changing demographics -- that us census designated group "white people" includes new Latino immigrants in Langley park, Wheaton, etc.