Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
I feel like this is not correct. My kids are all doing math far beyond what I was doing in FCPS in the same grades. There is no way they are lowering “math rigor”.
Far less math rigor now. Previously, a 3rd grader in AAP would learn that 1/2 = 0.5. Now, they have to wait until 4th grade to learn the existence of decimal equivalent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
I feel like this is not correct. My kids are all doing math far beyond what I was doing in FCPS in the same grades. There is no way they are lowering “math rigor”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
I feel like this is not correct. My kids are all doing math far beyond what I was doing in FCPS in the same grades. There is no way they are lowering “math rigor”.
Objectively between last school year and this school year they changed the 3rd grade math standards to accelerate significantly less. https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/30/1226968.page#28331524
Is this why my third grader is complaining about not being challenged in math class? (We have a meeting with the aart teacher this week)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
I feel like this is not correct. My kids are all doing math far beyond what I was doing in FCPS in the same grades. There is no way they are lowering “math rigor”.
Objectively between last school year and this school year they changed the 3rd grade math standards to accelerate significantly less. https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/30/1226968.page#28331524
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
I feel like this is not correct. My kids are all doing math far beyond what I was doing in FCPS in the same grades. There is no way they are lowering “math rigor”.
Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
This is sad because the one thing that public schools had over private schools was STEM, but now that STEM has gotten so important the private schools are spending more time and effort to get all the students good at it, and public schools are lowering standards so everybody can meet the standards for STEM (now they can say that all the kids are qualified so you can pick whoever you want, because they're all equally qualified).
It's not dead yet because they still allow kids to accelerate but STEM rigor in FCPS is dying. Hopefully parents fight back.
Anonymous wrote:LiarAnonymous wrote:FCPS just reduced the vigor of AAP math this year.
They did this by explaining the E3 math curriculum from a pilot to county-wide (including reducing the AAP curriculum).
Anonymous wrote:AAP has been lowering math rigor for years. If you can afford it, consider private schools. For low-income families, explore affordable afterschool math enrichment programs.
Anonymous wrote:LiarAnonymous wrote:FCPS just reduced the vigor of AAP math this year.
They did this by explaining the E3 math curriculum from a pilot to county-wide (including reducing the AAP curriculum).
LiarAnonymous wrote:FCPS just reduced the vigor of AAP math this year.
They did this by explaining the E3 math curriculum from a pilot to county-wide (including reducing the AAP curriculum).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, FCPS now has a defined reading and writing curriculum, so parochial schools no longer have an edge there. Nor do other privates.
This isn’t necessarily true. Just because there is a defined curriculum doesn’t meant that is as good as private/parochial. A lot of the teachers are skeptical. The jury will be out for while on this.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS just reduced the vigor of AAP math this year.
They did this by explaining the E3 math curriculum from a pilot to county-wide (including reducing the AAP curriculum).