Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PARENTS:
You might want to listen during the zoom call. Several kids commented that their parents were still asleep during my kid’s 9am zoom call this morning.
I cal total BS on this post. With as pathetic as the Zoom technology has been in MCPS has been and as hard as it’s been to actually log on and find a teacher on the other side, no kid is navigating that solo. Parents are awake and working hard.
Sad the contempt so many teachers have for parents.
You know, the people who pay their salaries.
Anonymous wrote:PARENTS:
You might want to listen during the zoom call. Several kids commented that their parents were still asleep during my kid’s 9am zoom call this morning.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS teacher here. We ALL know parents like the OP. And we all feel so sorry for their kids. We get why these poor kids have issues.
Hey OP: we DO talk about you at lunchtime.
Anonymous wrote:I don't usually rant but this is online "learning" from MCPS is embarrassingly awful. It's been three weeks and the best they can do is a chaotic 30-minute call. None of the kids (third graders) can type fast enough; the teacher can't use the technology; it's just a joke. This crisis is showing just how dysfunctional MCPS has become. There is so much wrong; kids can't send emails from their school gmail accounts; Zoom is so locked down it doesn't work; the teachers have clearly been massively handcuffed in what they can / can't do; the instructions have been unclear, overcomplicated, and confusing... It all seems to boil down to a bloated, top-heavy bureaucracy that can't function in anything other than the "normal" way. Our company has completely rebuilt itself in three weeks--MCPS seems to be about to just fall apart. And keep in mind--they're all getting guaranteed paychecks, courtesy the tax payers.
Our family is very close to hitting the f-it button and just sticking with the home schooling we started three weeks ago, which although difficult, has revealed just how little math, e.g., our son was learning. The curriculum they've been using may have been designed by smart mathematicians, but kids can't do subtraction of 2- or 3- digit numbers with carrying (the "algorithm"). Well, he's learning it now. He's also learning the 50 states; geography; spelling; history; and we're making him write book reports. And you know what? He actually loves it. In all seriousness, why not just withdraw and say we're home schooling for the remainder of the year? It's become very clear to us that MCPS--at least at our ES--isn't teaching kids. This lockdown period will just make it worse for most families who can't afford to spend the time / money to home school. It's tragic and terrible.
One more thing--that voice mail from Jack Smith (Superintendent) was epically bad. He sounded defeated and frankly ridiculous. That wasn't a leader; that was the Bill Paxton in Aliens... "We're All Gonna Die!" Between that phone call and this horrendous response--you've had a month to prepare, at least--just resign.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
ES teachers are teaching one class. I’m not suggesting teachers are not working; I’m asking as a parent and a taxpayer what the day looks like for an Elementary School teacher outside of the 45 minutes they’re on Zoom.
And yes, candidly, I’m disappointed that this is the best that MCPS can do at this point. Trying to understand.
I work a full time job that was previously almost entirely in-person job to a 100% remote one and get the challenges. But it’s also not that much different than when I had meetings in person. I prepare material and an agenda and I conduct the conversation by video conference. How is it so different for teachers?
PP, it's understandable that you're angry in these unprecedented times, but I will suggest that the most appropriate target for your anger is the failed response - in fact, the continuing, on-going failed response - of the people who are supposed to be in charge of the federal government.
Anonymous wrote:PARENTS:
You might want to listen during the zoom call. Several kids commented that their parents were still asleep during my kid’s 9am zoom call this morning.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS teacher here. We ALL know parents like the OP. And we all feel so sorry for their kids. We get why these poor kids have issues.
Hey OP: we DO talk about you at lunchtime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you expecting teachers to make a house call to each student or have a 6 hour zoom conference? It’s not going to be the same. This is just the beginning. Once things get rolling, I’m sure the work will pick up. Chill out!
How long can school systems keep saying this? I've now been teleworking for over 3 weeks and rest assured we aren't just chilling out and figuring out how to get things rolling. Work couldn't wait.
This is I think why so many working parents don't understand what is taking so long across the board. I don't know of anyone else who's employer is saying "yeah, it's been a few weeks but we'll get there. Don't worry about delivering your work product."
Anonymous wrote:I'm a college professor. I didn't go from a full teaching load to 30 minutes of nothing. Have to prepare for and record full-length lectures, Zoom for discussion sections and seminars. Office hour phone calls. Grading huge numbers of midterms.
Not at all sympathetic when I see my school district supervisors and teachers posting on social media photos of their kids with them in their gardens. WTF