Anonymous wrote:
What percentage of MoCo students attends magnets?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
We have to expand the program! But not too much! Just enough so that my kid is in it! Not more, not less!
-DCUM
Sigh. Do you really not understand the need for differentiation? That's what people are asking for. You can mock it by stating the ridiculous logical extreme, but that doesn't obviate the fact that differentiation is critical.
Nobody is arguing against differentiation.
As long as it ends up being a racially/socio economically balanced group in each category..
congrats - you just said the dumbest thing i've ever heard.
I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss the benefits of desegregation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So the top 1% has been getting a great education while the lower 99% gets a standard flawed curriculum with limited enrichment at the lower grades. My kids aren't old enough for magnets, but I'm really surprised MoCo has this system.
Good news! It doesn't!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
We have to expand the program! But not too much! Just enough so that my kid is in it! Not more, not less!
-DCUM
Sigh. Do you really not understand the need for differentiation? That's what people are asking for. You can mock it by stating the ridiculous logical extreme, but that doesn't obviate the fact that differentiation is critical.
Nobody is arguing against differentiation.
As long as it ends up being a racially/socio economically balanced group in each category..
congrats - you just said the dumbest thing i've ever heard.
Anonymous wrote:My middle school expanded the "advanced" curriculum to include everybody. That was not an improvement for anyone.
Anonymous wrote:
So the top 1% has been getting a great education while the lower 99% gets a standard flawed curriculum with limited enrichment at the lower grades. My kids aren't old enough for magnets, but I'm really surprised MoCo has this system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is laughable. The county is expanding these programs.
Expansion is what they did when they opened Poolesville That is a coherent Magnet program (multiple STEM classes for a cohort pulled from many high school clusters). What they are doing now is offering one enriched humanities and one enriched math class for some middle schools
So what would call it? They have expanded access to the enriched curriculum at the magnet level and didn't close the magnet programs. MCPS also added CES centers at the ES level. That is expansion to me.
+1 I don't get why people are fighting tooth and nail for their kids to be bused to a magnet. If there's a critical mass in the home school-educate them there. (And spare me the, it will be bad for the truly gifted--this is public school, the truly truly gifted who are rare can find a private option.)
I am going to guess that the people who are responding that manget programs are not as necessarily have not had their kids in a magnet program. I like the idea of universal testing. I like the idea that the few kids who are outliers to their lower performing home schools are now given greater opportunities to access the magnet program. I even like the cohort idea and keeping the higher achieving kids local to their home middle schools. What I don't like is the lack of a truer "magnet" program that connects the courses together. One of the nice things at the HGC is how the curriculum was linked which allow the kids to be creative with the production of their work. Also, some of the kids we met at the CES/HGC are incredibly intelligent, something that I feel cannot be trained through any type of prepping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is laughable. The county is expanding these programs.
Expansion is what they did when they opened Poolesville That is a coherent Magnet program (multiple STEM classes for a cohort pulled from many high school clusters). What they are doing now is offering one enriched humanities and one enriched math class for some middle schools
So what would call it? They have expanded access to the enriched curriculum at the magnet level and didn't close the magnet programs. MCPS also added CES centers at the ES level. That is expansion to me.
+1 I don't get why people are fighting tooth and nail for their kids to be bused to a magnet. If there's a critical mass in the home school-educate them there. (And spare me the, it will be bad for the truly gifted--this is public school, the truly truly gifted who are rare can find a private option.)
I am going to guess that the people who are responding that manget programs are not as necessarily have not had their kids in a magnet program. I like the idea of universal testing. I like the idea that the few kids who are outliers to their lower performing home schools are now given greater opportunities to access the magnet program. I even like the cohort idea and keeping the higher achieving kids local to their home middle schools. What I don't like is the lack of a truer "magnet" program that connects the courses together. One of the nice things at the HGC is how the curriculum was linked which allow the kids to be creative with the production of their work. Also, some of the kids we met at the CES/HGC are incredibly intelligent, something that I feel cannot be trained through any type of prepping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
We have to expand the program! But not too much! Just enough so that my kid is in it! Not more, not less!
-DCUM
Sigh. Do you really not understand the need for differentiation? That's what people are asking for. You can mock it by stating the ridiculous logical extreme, but that doesn't obviate the fact that differentiation is critical.
Nobody is arguing against differentiation.
As long as it ends up being a racially/socio economically balanced group in each category..
People like you are killing the school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
We have to expand the program! But not too much! Just enough so that my kid is in it! Not more, not less!
-DCUM
Sigh. Do you really not understand the need for differentiation? That's what people are asking for. You can mock it by stating the ridiculous logical extreme, but that doesn't obviate the fact that differentiation is critical.
Nobody is arguing against differentiation.
As long as it ends up being a racially/socio economically balanced group in each category..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
We have to expand the program! But not too much! Just enough so that my kid is in it! Not more, not less!
-DCUM
Sigh. Do you really not understand the need for differentiation? That's what people are asking for. You can mock it by stating the ridiculous logical extreme, but that doesn't obviate the fact that differentiation is critical.
Nobody is arguing against differentiation.
As long as it ends up being a racially/socio economically balanced group in each category..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is laughable. The county is expanding these programs.
Expansion is what they did when they opened Poolesville That is a coherent Magnet program (multiple STEM classes for a cohort pulled from many high school clusters). What they are doing now is offering one enriched humanities and one enriched math class for some middle schools
So what would call it? They have expanded access to the enriched curriculum at the magnet level and didn't close the magnet programs. MCPS also added CES centers at the ES level. That is expansion to me.
+1 I don't get why people are fighting tooth and nail for their kids to be bused to a magnet. If there's a critical mass in the home school-educate them there. (And spare me the, it will be bad for the truly gifted--this is public school, the truly truly gifted who are rare can find a private option.)
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
We have to expand the program! But not too much! Just enough so that my kid is in it! Not more, not less!
-DCUM
Sigh. Do you really not understand the need for differentiation? That's what people are asking for. You can mock it by stating the ridiculous logical extreme, but that doesn't obviate the fact that differentiation is critical.
Nobody is arguing against differentiation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think the concern is that the program will eventually/quickly be expanded to include everyone and we will be back to where we started. My elementary school has every one in compact math now. When it started it was just a few kids.
We have to expand the program! But not too much! Just enough so that my kid is in it! Not more, not less!
-DCUM
Sigh. Do you really not understand the need for differentiation? That's what people are asking for. You can mock it by stating the ridiculous logical extreme, but that doesn't obviate the fact that differentiation is critical.