Anonymous wrote:How can we get this back? Is there still a strong movement against it?
Anonymous wrote:MCPs decided a few years back that if you don’t hold the students accountable for attendance, the public and the parents cannot hold them accountable for results. This happened on or around 2018. And we’ve been living with it ever since. It’s not about kids with corrupt leadership, it’s about lack of accountability. A constant in this system since then.
Anonymous wrote:Wootton is awful at this. No consequences. The kids leave and return at will.
Anonymous wrote:There was a big fight at Sherwood that included kids who aren’t students there.
And a different student showed up to school with a knife today.
^^^
I’m more concerned about that sort of thing.
The reality is the kids go bananas in middle school and the adults lose control. If they maintained order and discipline in middle school, perhaps they could enforce it in high school?
If all else fails, send in the nuns ;0)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What has mcps done this school year to mitigate students skipping class? When driving to work mid morning, will see students outside or they'll be gathered at a local coffee place. Not sure if those days happen to be a different schedule at school or it's a regular for students
Nothing. MCPS has done nothing. At my school, the problem is as bad as ever. We end up just passing the kids because no one knows what to do with them.
Do they still send out "your kid was absent today" calls or messages? If they still do, can they continually send those messages to guardians until guardian excuses student for that day?
Automatic emails, yes.
I stopped getting those this year for whatever reason.
There are reports of some students blocking the number on their parents phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since when is 50% passing?
Where have you been? We can’t give zeroes. It will hurt their feelings. Besides, they might not be white or might have ADHD.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:how does one suggest it? Would be great if he brought this back.
Instead, advocate to state officials to allow students to drop out at 15. If they don't want to be in school, let them go.
I’m a teacher and I agree with this. We rarely had kids drop out who were college ready. The ones who did were years and years behind Roth no chance of catching up. Ex: 9th and 10th graders reading on elementary levels. If you looked into their attendance records, the story was clear. They missed 1/3 to 1/2 of nearly every school year since starting school. These kids are better off being taught a trade and earning money from the beginning.