Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is not one way to do education, however at Cardozo, we have decided that as a way to let students help assist us in letting them know how and what ways they like to learn. Our principal, Arthur Mola, and his XQ Design Leader, William Blake, have decided that we will create 4-5 separate cohorts where students will tell teachers, aides, librarians, and other dedicated staff how to teach and we meet Fridays for 3 hours, but still, there is no palpable results that demonstrate the effectiveness of this learning program.
What does this mean exactly? I get that students can tell you the ways they like to learn and teachers can use that information to structure lessons that incorporate various learning styles and interests. Is that what you mean when you say that cohorts of students are going to tell teachers "how" to teach? Has XQ provided examples of schools doing this well that can be visited or further researched?
Anonymous wrote:People make the students at Cardozo sound like 3/4 of the way down the school to prison pipeline.
Anonymous wrote:There is not one way to do education, however at Cardozo, we have decided that as a way to let students help assist us in letting them know how and what ways they like to learn. Our principal, Arthur Mola, and his XQ Design Leader, William Blake, have decided that we will create 4-5 separate cohorts where students will tell teachers, aides, librarians, and other dedicated staff how to teach and we meet Fridays for 3 hours, but still, there is no palpable results that demonstrate the effectiveness of this learning program.
Anonymous wrote:All the XQ programs are going to fail, and it seems obvious to me. When you have high schools filled with students who can’t read, are performing several years below grade level, have food insecurity, experience violence in their community, live with family members who are abusive, etc, there is no gimmick that will help them. High school is TOO LATE. DC needs to realize they have a societal and community problem, not a school problem. The schools alone will never be able to fix this, and having XQ programs like afrofuturism are certainly not going to suddenly make teenagers literate.
Anonymous wrote:All the XQ programs are going to fail, and it seems obvious to me. When you have high schools filled with students who can’t read, are performing several years below grade level, have food insecurity, experience violence in their community, live with family members who are abusive, etc, there is no gimmick that will help them. High school is TOO LATE. DC needs to realize they have a societal and community problem, not a school problem. The schools alone will never be able to fix this, and having XQ programs like afrofuturism are certainly not going to suddenly make teenagers literate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher at Cardozo, the principal Mola only prioritizes what’s going to get him headlines.
XQ is that tool. He really believes that it will save all of the kids from poverty, illiteracy, crime, a rough upbringing, etc.
There are no cures for these things, especially in a one-size catch all net.
Our kids could learn to read and write better and they are far from stupid, but they and us are being used for this colossal waste of money and time.
William Blake is literally the biggest drain on all of our resources. He does nothing but collect his $180K salary.
Meanwhile, we’ve had at least three students shot this year, many of the kids are trying to fight off the allure of joining a gang, and he’s trying to stick us in trainings with the kids lecturing us on how to teach better. It’s insulting.
Sorry, I’m not as nice as the OP.
Thanks teacher. I absolutely agree that the kids could learn better.
Sarcasm aside, the teachers on this post have a point. They’re asking to not having to waste their time with nonsense like this XQ thing. Instead the program seems to be doing the exact opposite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher at Cardozo, the principal Mola only prioritizes what’s going to get him headlines.
XQ is that tool. He really believes that it will save all of the kids from poverty, illiteracy, crime, a rough upbringing, etc.
There are no cures for these things, especially in a one-size catch all net.
Our kids could learn to read and write better and they are far from stupid, but they and us are being used for this colossal waste of money and time.
William Blake is literally the biggest drain on all of our resources. He does nothing but collect his $180K salary.
Meanwhile, we’ve had at least three students shot this year, many of the kids are trying to fight off the allure of joining a gang, and he’s trying to stick us in trainings with the kids lecturing us on how to teach better. It’s insulting.
Sorry, I’m not as nice as the OP.
Thanks teacher. I absolutely agree that the kids could learn better.
Anonymous wrote:As a teacher at Cardozo, the principal Mola only prioritizes what’s going to get him headlines.
XQ is that tool. He really believes that it will save all of the kids from poverty, illiteracy, crime, a rough upbringing, etc.
There are no cures for these things, especially in a one-size catch all net.
Our kids could learn to read and write better and they are far from stupid, but they and us are being used for this colossal waste of money and time.
William Blake is literally the biggest drain on all of our resources. He does nothing but collect his $180K salary.
Meanwhile, we’ve had at least three students shot this year, many of the kids are trying to fight off the allure of joining a gang, and he’s trying to stick us in trainings with the kids lecturing us on how to teach better. It’s insulting.
Sorry, I’m not as nice as the OP.