Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VOTE.
VOTE.
There is an election in November for statewide offices.
Vote out the idiots you elected last time.
What are the alternatives? And how are they different than these idiots?
Well there is a fool on this board that always says they will "care about education and not equity". As if those are inextricable. At best you get someone like that but benign, at worst you get the Trumpian wing of the party which is likely and its a shit show for a place that isn't just white, hetero, religious, etc.
I do wish the school board for FCPS wasn't such a political stepping stone. I do agree that is an issue because the size of the district certainly lends itself to people who are more ambition focused vs mission focused. I will give people that gripe. But "vote RED YALL" is not exactly a solution here. People's values are going to kick in and they won't vote for the opposition endorsed candidates if they show they are aligned with the kinds of people who storm the capitol, for example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I’m seeing algebra in middle school per the chart not 9th? Am I looking at the wrong information?
Yes, algebra is in k-7 in the chart here.
https://www.doe.virginia.gov/instruction/mathematics/vmpi/index.shtml#goal
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our teachers are not good enough to differentiate to the variety of abilities in one, overcrowded class. Sorry.
If classes are capped smaller and we hire better teachers, sure, this works.
It's not a question of better teachers in my view. It's that the county/state/whoever expects teachers to invent the differentiation themselves rather than saying: "here's the main curriculum & how to have the kids practice it, here are the extra supports for kids that aren't getting it right away, and here are the extension for the quick kids that need something deeper". It should not be on the teachers to invent things all by themselves but that's what happens and that's a big part of why differentiation in math isn't going to work - because teachers don't have time to invent all these extra things that the county should be providing to them but doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I need more details on how these paths work. By my understanding, everyone is in regular math together through 10th, and they all effectively take Algebra I and Geometry in 9th and 10th. How are they going to fit in the rest of the classes that lead them through Calc or into any post-calc classes? If a kid is doing IB, how can they take IB Analysis I in 10th? I thought that wasn't going to be allowed.
Thaf alreasy puts them a year behind.
Algebra is an 8th grade class for the average to bright kids, and a 6th or 7th grade class for the exceptional kids.
Algebra in 9th is remedial.
So Virginia is going to move the entire state to a remedial math track just so some kids don't have to feel badly about not taking calculus??
Wtf Virginia!!
Vote differently this November.
I’m seeing algebra in middle school per the chart not 9th? Am I looking at the wrong information?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I need more details on how these paths work. By my understanding, everyone is in regular math together through 10th, and they all effectively take Algebra I and Geometry in 9th and 10th. How are they going to fit in the rest of the classes that lead them through Calc or into any post-calc classes? If a kid is doing IB, how can they take IB Analysis I in 10th? I thought that wasn't going to be allowed.
Thaf alreasy puts them a year behind.
Algebra is an 8th grade class for the average to bright kids, and a 6th or 7th grade class for the exceptional kids.
Algebra in 9th is remedial.
So Virginia is going to move the entire state to a remedial math track just so some kids don't have to feel badly about not taking calculus??
Wtf Virginia!!
Vote differently this November.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our teachers are not good enough to differentiate to the variety of abilities in one, overcrowded class. Sorry.
If classes are capped smaller and we hire better teachers, sure, this works.
It's not a question of better teachers in my view. It's that the county/state/whoever expects teachers to invent the differentiation themselves rather than saying: "here's the main curriculum & how to have the kids practice it, here are the extra supports for kids that aren't getting it right away, and here are the extension for the quick kids that need something deeper". It should not be on the teachers to invent things all by themselves but that's what happens and that's a big part of why differentiation in math isn't going to work - because teachers don't have time to invent all these extra things that the county should be providing to them but doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:Paraphrasing a PP, what do Tech, W&M and UVA say about this? How will this affect students’ preparation for college?
Anonymous wrote:Our teachers are not good enough to differentiate to the variety of abilities in one, overcrowded class. Sorry.
If classes are capped smaller and we hire better teachers, sure, this works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do kids need to take Calculus in high school anyway?
My high school didn't even offer calculus. I simply took a year of it freshman year of college, majored in mathematics, got a master's in a STEM area, and have been working on a STEM field ever since.
What benefit would taking calculus in high school have given me?
Well, grandma, things were different in the 70s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So how do they grade 9th grade math under this system? Before, a kid who was above average in an honors class would get a B or a B-, but it would be boosted and an above average non-honors would jus get the B, B-. The difference gets reflected on the transcript, but the non-honors kid still has the B on their report card. Now that all those kids are in the same room, does the teacher just hand out more C-s and Ds to reflect the stark differences between students (the kid would would be getting the A+ in the honors class vs. the kid struggling in the gen class)?
Take a look at the VA DOE youtube channel. They have a video on grading and equity. So probably the grading will be changed to keep the weaker students from feeling left out.
Anonymous wrote:I need more details on how these paths work. By my understanding, everyone is in regular math together through 10th, and they all effectively take Algebra I and Geometry in 9th and 10th. How are they going to fit in the rest of the classes that lead them through Calc or into any post-calc classes? If a kid is doing IB, how can they take IB Analysis I in 10th? I thought that wasn't going to be allowed.
Anonymous wrote:Why do kids need to take Calculus in high school anyway?
My high school didn't even offer calculus. I simply took a year of it freshman year of college, majored in mathematics, got a master's in a STEM area, and have been working on a STEM field ever since.
What benefit would taking calculus in high school have given me?