Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t care what the work habits are - that is leftover babyish elementary crap. If my kid is getting As, he has good work habits period. We don’t need the extra feedback.
If mine is getting Bs or Cs and has poor work habits, I definitely want to know that — so I can help DC learn better study habits before college.
A B or a C inherently means your child doesn’t have good study habits. You don’t need an additional comment to tell you that. Just look at the letter grade for God’s sake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t care what the work habits are - that is leftover babyish elementary crap. If my kid is getting As, he has good work habits period. We don’t need the extra feedback.
If mine is getting Bs or Cs and has poor work habits, I definitely want to know that — so I can help DC learn better study habits before college.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t care what the work habits are - that is leftover babyish elementary crap. If my kid is getting As, he has good work habits period. We don’t need the extra feedback.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t care what the work habits are - that is leftover babyish elementary crap. If my kid is getting As, he has good work habits period. We don’t need the extra feedback.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry. This is dumb. How is the teacher to know what a high school kid's work habits are?
Not turning in homework? Not paying attention in class? Is this what they mean?
If it is a problem in class, then it deserves a comment--not a check in a box.
My two kids have very different work habits. DD comes home and gets it done. DS requires constant reminders. How is the teacher to know that?
I taught elementary school kids. Even there, it deserves a comment if it is a problem. Not a checked box.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher in FCPS. The email yesterday was the first I heard of this (as well as the first time hearing it from the other teachers I have talked to).
This is a ridiculous thing added to our to-do list that doesn't actually provide any new information to parents
Clicking another button on their automated report card is going to be REALLY HARD!
You have taught 3 full weeks of classes in the first quarter? 5?
Take teacher bashing to another thread so as not to distract from point here that this is worthless reporting.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry. This is dumb. How is the teacher to know what a high school kid's work habits are?
Not turning in homework? Not paying attention in class? Is this what they mean?
If it is a problem in class, then it deserves a comment--not a check in a box.
My two kids have very different work habits. DD comes home and gets it done. DS requires constant reminders. How is the teacher to know that?
I taught elementary school kids. Even there, it deserves a comment if it is a problem. Not a checked box.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were told about it at last week's TWD. It takes 2 minutes to auto fill down "S" for satisfactory and change the 3-5 kids to "N" (U? Whatever unsatisfactory is) who have a dozen missing assignments or who I have to redirect 14 times a period. I think it adds approximately 0 value though. If a kid is getting an "N", I've already communicated home about behaviors or recorded missing assignments in SIS.
I was surprised to learn it was new for some middle schools though. When I taught middle school it was always required.
Are you saying 2 minutes to complete for 150 students? Still 2 minutes too much, still worthless and doesn’t count the additional time to answer the questions the scoring will likely prompt from students and teachers.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t care what the work habits are - that is leftover babyish elementary crap. If my kid is getting As, he has good work habits period. We don’t need the extra feedback.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher in FCPS. The email yesterday was the first I heard of this (as well as the first time hearing it from the other teachers I have talked to).
This is a ridiculous thing added to our to-do list that doesn't actually provide any new information to parents
Clicking another button on their automated report card is going to be REALLY HARD!
You have taught 3 full weeks of classes in the first quarter? 5?