Anonymous wrote:No textbooks to bring home is totally normal now.
Anonymous wrote:If the teacher is using a textbook to structure her class, then the students should have that textbook too — and bring it home. Just putting screenshots online or giving printouts is lame and chintzy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The shift away from textbooks is not progress. It’s very difficult to track curriculum, progress etc when there is no measuring stick. The notion that they are expensive doesn’t sit with me. They are purchased once and used for a decade. Expensive and soon outdated computers that kids break strike me as expensive.
I was not using any MS or HS textbooks a decade later. I doubt most people are - maybe occasionally referencing a HS science or math text in intro college classes, I suppose?
Our school uses online versions of textbooks, which are great. Harper for us ($30ish? Compared to $60-80?), nothing to lug around, never in your locker when you need it at home or at home when you need it in class. Each kid gets a link and a login code. Works very well for DC. And if a student really needs a physical copy, the yea her or the academic center are always willing to lend one out.
Agree ppl aren't referencing textbooks later. But the schools keep them and re-use them year over year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The shift away from textbooks is not progress. It’s very difficult to track curriculum, progress etc when there is no measuring stick. The notion that they are expensive doesn’t sit with me. They are purchased once and used for a decade. Expensive and soon outdated computers that kids break strike me as expensive.
I was not using any MS or HS textbooks a decade later. I doubt most people are - maybe occasionally referencing a HS science or math text in intro college classes, I suppose?
Our school uses online versions of textbooks, which are great. Harper for us ($30ish? Compared to $60-80?), nothing to lug around, never in your locker when you need it at home or at home when you need it in class. Each kid gets a link and a login code. Works very well for DC. And if a student really needs a physical copy, the yea her or the academic center are always willing to lend one out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Mary’s does but seem to provide textbooks that students can actually bring home, at least not in elementary grades.
It’s been awhile since I’ve been in school. Is this a new thing/trend (not to provide textbooks that students can bring home)?? Or is this just a St Mary’s thing? Or a money-saving thing? It’s very odd to me.
This is our private also. Teachers say they feel bad for the kids lugging massive backpacks home. In some cases families can ask for the textbook to come home if they feel they need it.
In most subjects (math, grammar, spelling) I can pull up the textbook online or find it another way when I need to help them. And the kids do bring home workbooks.
Since we just came from the public schools, I know that the existence of a comprehensive curriculum instead of worksheets printed by teachers to match whatever standards VDOE has pushed on schools this cycle is light years better. In the past if my kids had a math problem I was scrounging around the internet to find a YouTube video so we could figure it out. Now I can at least pull up a textbook. So amazing.
My kids have books but they always go to Kahn Academy or YouTube. I am sure by the time they are parents, there will be no textbooks,
Anonymous wrote:The shift away from textbooks is not progress. It’s very difficult to track curriculum, progress etc when there is no measuring stick. The notion that they are expensive doesn’t sit with me. They are purchased once and used for a decade. Expensive and soon outdated computers that kids break strike me as expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St Mary’s does but seem to provide textbooks that students can actually bring home, at least not in elementary grades.
It’s been awhile since I’ve been in school. Is this a new thing/trend (not to provide textbooks that students can bring home)?? Or is this just a St Mary’s thing? Or a money-saving thing? It’s very odd to me.
This is our private also. Teachers say they feel bad for the kids lugging massive backpacks home. In some cases families can ask for the textbook to come home if they feel they need it.
In most subjects (math, grammar, spelling) I can pull up the textbook online or find it another way when I need to help them. And the kids do bring home workbooks.
Since we just came from the public schools, I know that the existence of a comprehensive curriculum instead of worksheets printed by teachers to match whatever standards VDOE has pushed on schools this cycle is light years better. In the past if my kids had a math problem I was scrounging around the internet to find a YouTube video so we could figure it out. Now I can at least pull up a textbook. So amazing.
Anonymous wrote:St Mary’s does but seem to provide textbooks that students can actually bring home, at least not in elementary grades.
It’s been awhile since I’ve been in school. Is this a new thing/trend (not to provide textbooks that students can bring home)?? Or is this just a St Mary’s thing? Or a money-saving thing? It’s very odd to me.