Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "all in" tutoring program is badly defined by the state. APS already does small group interventions during the school day. This all in program is just window dressing -- basically tutoring by volunteers. Do it if you want to but it won't be a game changer. Of course, the governor will take credit for test score increases but those will be due to APS's school day interventions, not this casual tutoring program.
Or, more likely in my neighborhood school, from the private, expensive at home tutoring that APS’ closure cost parents.
This. Don’t kid yourself — the school day interventions (aka more Lexia) are a joke.
Most improvements will be made via private tutors or parents jumping in to teach their kids to read at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "all in" tutoring program is badly defined by the state. APS already does small group interventions during the school day. This all in program is just window dressing -- basically tutoring by volunteers. Do it if you want to but it won't be a game changer. Of course, the governor will take credit for test score increases but those will be due to APS's school day interventions, not this casual tutoring program.
Or, more likely in my neighborhood school, from the private, expensive at home tutoring that APS’ closure cost parents.
This. Don’t kid yourself — the school day interventions (aka more Lexia) are a joke.
Most improvements will be made via private tutors or parents jumping in to teach their kids to read at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine was invited to after school tutoring to finish the apps. Would you all go for this?
what do you mean finish the apps?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "all in" tutoring program is badly defined by the state. APS already does small group interventions during the school day. This all in program is just window dressing -- basically tutoring by volunteers. Do it if you want to but it won't be a game changer. Of course, the governor will take credit for test score increases but those will be due to APS's school day interventions, not this casual tutoring program.
Or, more likely in my neighborhood school, from the private, expensive at home tutoring that APS’ closure cost parents.
Anonymous wrote:The "all in" tutoring program is badly defined by the state. APS already does small group interventions during the school day. This all in program is just window dressing -- basically tutoring by volunteers. Do it if you want to but it won't be a game changer. Of course, the governor will take credit for test score increases but those will be due to APS's school day interventions, not this casual tutoring program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an email via parentvue. My 5th grader qualifies a few days a week, but from 8-8:30 am. I asked if this was virtual or in person and what the kids do between tutoring and start of school, no response. We said YES to the extra help and agree with PP above - we will drop the program if it is not working for us.
At our 9 am start school, morning recess starts at 8:30 am, so that would be what they do in between. What time are kids allowed to be dropped off at your school?
So morning recess isn't part of the school day. It's just that your school opens its doors at 8:30 and kids are able to play until school starts. That's not "morning recess."
Some schools have official morning recess. Claremont starts morning recess at 740am. Kids go out to the playground. It is monitored and called morning recess![]()
What??? So jealous!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an email via parentvue. My 5th grader qualifies a few days a week, but from 8-8:30 am. I asked if this was virtual or in person and what the kids do between tutoring and start of school, no response. We said YES to the extra help and agree with PP above - we will drop the program if it is not working for us.
At our 9 am start school, morning recess starts at 8:30 am, so that would be what they do in between. What time are kids allowed to be dropped off at your school?
So morning recess isn't part of the school day. It's just that your school opens its doors at 8:30 and kids are able to play until school starts. That's not "morning recess."
Some schools have official morning recess. Claremont starts morning recess at 740am. Kids go out to the playground. It is monitored and called morning recess![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an email via parentvue. My 5th grader qualifies a few days a week, but from 8-8:30 am. I asked if this was virtual or in person and what the kids do between tutoring and start of school, no response. We said YES to the extra help and agree with PP above - we will drop the program if it is not working for us.
At our 9 am start school, morning recess starts at 8:30 am, so that would be what they do in between. What time are kids allowed to be dropped off at your school?
So morning recess isn't part of the school day. It's just that your school opens its doors at 8:30 and kids are able to play until school starts. That's not "morning recess."
Some schools have official morning recess. Claremont starts morning recess at 740am. Kids go out to the playground. It is monitored and called morning recess![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an email via parentvue. My 5th grader qualifies a few days a week, but from 8-8:30 am. I asked if this was virtual or in person and what the kids do between tutoring and start of school, no response. We said YES to the extra help and agree with PP above - we will drop the program if it is not working for us.
At our 9 am start school, morning recess starts at 8:30 am, so that would be what they do in between. What time are kids allowed to be dropped off at your school?
So morning recess isn't part of the school day. It's just that your school opens its doors at 8:30 and kids are able to play until school starts. That's not "morning recess."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an email via parentvue. My 5th grader qualifies a few days a week, but from 8-8:30 am. I asked if this was virtual or in person and what the kids do between tutoring and start of school, no response. We said YES to the extra help and agree with PP above - we will drop the program if it is not working for us.
At our 9 am start school, morning recess starts at 8:30 am, so that would be what they do in between. What time are kids allowed to be dropped off at your school?
So morning recess isn't part of the school day. It's just that your school opens its doors at 8:30 and kids are able to play until school starts. That's not "morning recess."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an email via parentvue. My 5th grader qualifies a few days a week, but from 8-8:30 am. I asked if this was virtual or in person and what the kids do between tutoring and start of school, no response. We said YES to the extra help and agree with PP above - we will drop the program if it is not working for us.
At our 9 am start school, morning recess starts at 8:30 am, so that would be what they do in between. What time are kids allowed to be dropped off at your school?
Anonymous wrote:We had an email via parentvue. My 5th grader qualifies a few days a week, but from 8-8:30 am. I asked if this was virtual or in person and what the kids do between tutoring and start of school, no response. We said YES to the extra help and agree with PP above - we will drop the program if it is not working for us.
Anonymous wrote:Mine was invited to after school tutoring to finish the apps. Would you all go for this?