Anonymous wrote:My kid is not very fond of academics in general but loves science, so I'm looking forward to her getting to spend more time on that so school feels a little less boring to her. She's in 2nd grade this year and it looks like she'll only have 1.5 hours a week that'll be split between science, social studies, and health, so very little time on science again this year. When might we expect this to increase, and by how much? Are there countywide guidelines for this or is it up to the individual school? How much time do your elementary school students spend on science?
Anonymous wrote:My kid is not very fond of academics in general but loves science, so I'm looking forward to her getting to spend more time on that so school feels a little less boring to her. She's in 2nd grade this year and it looks like she'll only have 1.5 hours a week that'll be split between science, social studies, and health, so very little time on science again this year. When might we expect this to increase, and by how much? Are there countywide guidelines for this or is it up to the individual school? How much time do your elementary school students spend on science?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they still doing the Young Scholars Program through the Saturday School?
YSP in 3rd-5th was the best science my kid had until Honors Physics in 9th grade. She was lukewarm on the math part (although she found the enrichment more fun than compacted math), but absolutely adored the science lessons.
None of it really tied into the curriculum, probably because there really wasn’t much of one to begin with. But at least it let her know that science existed, was interesting and fun, and didn’t have to be an afterthought.
Pathetic that that’s where you had to go to get exposure to science.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why there aren’t better integrated programs for language arts/ science for elementary.
Lab instructions can be simple to read and lab reports are also relatively easy to write and illustrate. It seems like it would be easier to check reading comprehension on text that is fact-based too.
Anonymous wrote:My 2nd grader has 45 min for science/social studies a day. Its first thing in the am. Last hear they split weeks and one week was science and one week was social studies. They have 2 hrs foe ELA this year. Its critical 2nd graders become proficient readers since in 3rd they are expected to read to learn things like science etc.
Anonymous wrote:Are they still doing the Young Scholars Program through the Saturday School?
YSP in 3rd-5th was the best science my kid had until Honors Physics in 9th grade. She was lukewarm on the math part (although she found the enrichment more fun than compacted math), but absolutely adored the science lessons.
None of it really tied into the curriculum, probably because there really wasn’t much of one to begin with. But at least it let her know that science existed, was interesting and fun, and didn’t have to be an afterthought.
Anonymous wrote:My 2nd grader's schedule contains 20 mins science/social science/health every day, so a total of 100 minutes every week. Math occupies 75 mins, and ELA takes 105 mins! I never know ELA is so serious for low ES.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are grown. As I recall when they developed Curriculum 2.0, they tried to incorporate some science and social studies into the reading curriculum, which I think has been replaced. You may be left with the lousy science curriculum my kids had before that. To compensate, my school’s PTA allowed an outside enrichment group called Hands on Science to come in and offer an after-school enrichment program, which was wildly popular. You might check with your PTA and see if that program, or something similar, might be available at your school.
The STEM magnets are great and I think the specialty programs are generally good too. The very limited info I had on the standard MCPS middle school science classes are that they weren’t great, but at least there were formal classes, which is an improvement over your current elementary science program.
Here are some other resources:
Hoagie’s has links to websites for enrichment for all subjects and ages:
https://www.hoagiesgifted.org/science.htm
https://www.hoagiesgifted.org/links.htm
Brainpop has great animated lessons in many subjects, but does charge a fairly significant fee.
Rockville has an annual science day in the Spring. I don’t see 2024 info yet, but here’s info from 2023.
https://www.rockvillesciencecenter.org/rockville-science-day