The retakes are ridiculous.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is great if you're a family who prioritizes education and is involved in their kid's lives. However, if you are one of those parents who expects the county to raise your kid then it's not so great.
I used to believe that until I learned that my one child, who got A's in maths in HS, had to retake math classes in college because she never really learned it in HS. What was really happening was/is, the classes were brought down to the lowest common denominators. They are running regular ed like they run special ed, LREs.
Also, kids who have strong GPAs that rely on a generous retake policy in MCPS are in for a rude awakening in college. MCPS is not setting our kids up for success with all of its lenient BS.
Anonymous wrote:We moved to Montgomery County because of the schools, and now, we are moving out for the exact same reason. MCPS has been deteriorating on so many levels over the last decade. It feels like watching a car wreck in slow motion. Our kids deserve better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MCPS is great if you're a family who prioritizes education and is involved in their kid's lives. However, if you are one of those parents who expects the county to raise your kid then it's not so great.
I used to believe that until I learned that my one child, who got A's in maths in HS, had to retake math classes in college because she never really learned it in HS. What was really happening was/is, the classes were brought down to the lowest common denominators. They are running regular ed like they run special ed, LREs.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS is great if you're a family who prioritizes education and is involved in their kid's lives. However, if you are one of those parents who expects the county to raise your kid then it's not so great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about parents disciplining their kids at home and teaching kids to respect adults so kids behave when they get to school
As a teacher, I am scared if i discipline a kid, they will come back with a gun a shoot me.
I will say it also goes in reverse. I am a parent who does not tolerate having no consequences for late work. The teachers (maybe more administrator policies?) never knocked down assignments for late work. It made it more difficult as a parent because my high schooler knew there were no consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, have you lived elsewhere in the country?
I have lived in Boulder, CO; Los Angeles; Richmond, VA; North Carolina and Miami.
Whether people want to believe it or not DC area public schools are very well funded much moreso than many districts across the country.
Hate to break it to you, but "more funding" does not always equal better education. There is more waste and administrative bloat in MCPS than anywhere I've seen.
Anonymous wrote:How about parents disciplining their kids at home and teaching kids to respect adults so kids behave when they get to school
As a teacher, I am scared if i discipline a kid, they will come back with a gun a shoot me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email just now from mcps about increasing every many clasd sixes by one student but not cutting any teachers.
Who want to explain the math behind that?
More kids in your students class but no teachers cuts. What.
I just skimmed it. Makes you want to put your kid in a title 1 or focus school. I feel for the teachers with 25 kindergarteners. I know some people will think, it’s just one more, but it’s not, it will feel like 10 more.
We already had 26 kindergarteners per class this past year in our MCPS (in Bethesda).
You should come over to Silver Spring. We've never had a class over 20. Our first grade was 14 kids. It's great.
Outside of Title 1/Focus schools or those with declining enrollment I know no one that had a first grade class with 14. 20+ is the norm.
Right but there's plenty of Title I/Focus schools to choose from, if you value education.
You do realize that’s not how it works? If folks start moving en masse to Title1/Focus schools, those schools would lose the designation and be subject to the normal class size requirements.
The only potential benefit could be a better SES balance across the county.
Any individual worried about class size can move without changing any designations, but not if you'd rather live in Bethesda than have your kid in a small class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email just now from mcps about increasing every many clasd sixes by one student but not cutting any teachers.
Who want to explain the math behind that?
More kids in your students class but no teachers cuts. What.
I just skimmed it. Makes you want to put your kid in a title 1 or focus school. I feel for the teachers with 25 kindergarteners. I know some people will think, it’s just one more, but it’s not, it will feel like 10 more.
We already had 26 kindergarteners per class this past year in our MCPS (in Bethesda).
You should come over to Silver Spring. We've never had a class over 20. Our first grade was 14 kids. It's great.
Outside of Title 1/Focus schools or those with declining enrollment I know no one that had a first grade class with 14. 20+ is the norm.
Right but there's plenty of Title I/Focus schools to choose from, if you value education.
You do realize that’s not how it works? If folks start moving en masse to Title1/Focus schools, those schools would lose the designation and be subject to the normal class size requirements.
The only potential benefit could be a better SES balance across the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email just now from mcps about increasing every many clasd sixes by one student but not cutting any teachers.
Who want to explain the math behind that?
More kids in your students class but no teachers cuts. What.
I just skimmed it. Makes you want to put your kid in a title 1 or focus school. I feel for the teachers with 25 kindergarteners. I know some people will think, it’s just one more, but it’s not, it will feel like 10 more.
We already had 26 kindergarteners per class this past year in our MCPS (in Bethesda).
You should come over to Silver Spring. We've never had a class over 20. Our first grade was 14 kids. It's great.
Outside of Title 1/Focus schools or those with declining enrollment I know no one that had a first grade class with 14. 20+ is the norm.
Right but there's plenty of Title I/Focus schools to choose from, if you value education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email just now from mcps about increasing every many clasd sixes by one student but not cutting any teachers.
Who want to explain the math behind that?
More kids in your students class but no teachers cuts. What.
I just skimmed it. Makes you want to put your kid in a title 1 or focus school. I feel for the teachers with 25 kindergarteners. I know some people will think, it’s just one more, but it’s not, it will feel like 10 more.
We already had 26 kindergarteners per class this past year in our MCPS (in Bethesda).
You should come over to Silver Spring. We've never had a class over 20. Our first grade was 14 kids. It's great.
Our Bethesda kindergarten class this year was 18. Also under 20 for my older kids.
Anonymous wrote:We moved to Montgomery County because of the schools, and now, we are moving out for the exact same reason. MCPS has been deteriorating on so many levels over the last decade. It feels like watching a car wreck in slow motion. Our kids deserve better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Email just now from mcps about increasing every many clasd sixes by one student but not cutting any teachers.
Who want to explain the math behind that?
More kids in your students class but no teachers cuts. What.
I just skimmed it. Makes you want to put your kid in a title 1 or focus school. I feel for the teachers with 25 kindergarteners. I know some people will think, it’s just one more, but it’s not, it will feel like 10 more.
We already had 26 kindergarteners per class this past year in our MCPS (in Bethesda).
You should come over to Silver Spring. We've never had a class over 20. Our first grade was 14 kids. It's great.
Outside of Title 1/Focus schools or those with declining enrollment I know no one that had a first grade class with 14. 20+ is the norm.