Anonymous wrote:My Larla shouldn't have to hang out with the poors. She needs her own cohort.
or something.
It’s not about hanging out with the poors. It’s about teachers having to focus all their time and energy on students who are below grade level (often several years below grade level) and multiple behavior issues without parent support. Unless you have a principal willing to think outside the box and differentiate instruction, there is little time left over to provide enrichment to those above grade level or even on grade level. Our school also seems to have somewhat of a transient population with multiple students coming and leaving each month. That means the teachers have to concentrate on getting those students acclimated, which obviously takes time. Much different than when you have only one or two students leaving or arriving in the classroom throughout the school year.
Also, it’s great that our Title 1 school is a community school but the focus seems to have entirely shifted to having a food and diaper bank and providing parent resources (which are AWESOME for those who need it but not at the expense of taking away teachers). In an idea world, we would have students making progress AND be able to provide extras to families with multiple kids who need financial help. Our school has two wellness coaches and two community coordinators, all prior teachers. The best way to improve the school is helping the students who need academic support receive it from small groups with committed teachers.