Anonymous wrote:Well well well...
"Three schools - Robert Frost, Takoma Park, and White Oak, offer Honors Algebra 2 at their school.
Students in other middle schools must attend a local high school to take that class."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well well well...
"Three schools - Robert Frost, Takoma Park, and White Oak, offer Honors Algebra 2 at their school.
Students in other middle schools must attend a local high school to take that class."
well.. yes. If the cohort is large, it makes sense to offer the course in the school. Otherwise, it makes no sense to have a teacher just for like 6 kids in the class.
They don't have metrics for when to offer courses. They don't measure interest in courses they don't offer. It is all up to the principal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well well well...
"Three schools - Robert Frost, Takoma Park, and White Oak, offer Honors Algebra 2 at their school.
Students in other middle schools must attend a local high school to take that class."
well.. yes. If the cohort is large, it makes sense to offer the course in the school. Otherwise, it makes no sense to have a teacher just for like 6 kids in the class.
Anonymous wrote:That report shows region 4 program includes Rockville HS. I thought Rockville HS was removed from Region 4.
Anonymous wrote:Well well well...
"Three schools - Robert Frost, Takoma Park, and White Oak, offer Honors Algebra 2 at their school.
Students in other middle schools must attend a local high school to take that class."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not trust this report. We are at B-CC. There is not on-level English classes. Only Honors (or AP/IB in grades 11/12). Maybe if you are ELD, they will put you in an on-level class, but not if you are an English speaker, even when you are performing below grade level. It is definitely honors for all, and that is why teachers do not actually teach an honors class. It is grade-level at best.
My kid is in Bridge at Churchill. Is there an SESES program at BCC? We have grade level classes in Bridge so I'm thinking that if BCC has a sp ed program, the regular classes might be for the self contained courses.
This is the course registration card for 9th grade for B-CC. They told incoming parents that everyone takes honors English 9A/B and there is no on-level option. This is the same as years past.
It does look like they have a separate class for ELDs at certain levels, so maybe that is what they mean. If that is the case, the report is definitely misleading by stating that English 9A/B is an option. It's honors for all except for the few kids assigned to that class.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1omOjmST8HEQQ-BXftkgdPqZZyPH5waQ7qBa7mJvO5Fk/edit
My son who is in Bridge, doesn't do course registration via the registration cards/online forms. The counselors register them into their classes. Bridge classes don't appear on the forms since they already know who will be placed in the class based on the IEPs.
Anonymous wrote:Doesn't MCPS pay for AP Exams? I know they are covering my kid this year. I don't know about last year.
In addition, even if a school offers a significant number of AP courses, that does not necessarily equate to
equal participation among students. Often, Black and Latinx are less likely to be enrolled in an AP course
for a multitude of reasons: students can only take AP classes through (1) teacher recommendations, who
can have more negative perceptions and lower expectations of Black and Latinx students than they do of
other students,77 or (2) through a single state standardized test score which may not fully reflect a student’s
readiness for an AP course. Further, Black and Latinx students are often tracked into vocational training
instead of college preparatory classes. 78 A further barrier for students is the fee for taking an exam in each
subject area. While several states and the College Board offer fee reductions, the cost of the tests may still
be a barrier. (pg.99-100)
I know the comment is referencing an external study but if cost is not a barrier for MCPS students, it should be noted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not trust this report. We are at B-CC. There is not on-level English classes. Only Honors (or AP/IB in grades 11/12). Maybe if you are ELD, they will put you in an on-level class, but not if you are an English speaker, even when you are performing below grade level. It is definitely honors for all, and that is why teachers do not actually teach an honors class. It is grade-level at best.
My kid is in Bridge at Churchill. Is there an SESES program at BCC? We have grade level classes in Bridge so I'm thinking that if BCC has a sp ed program, the regular classes might be for the self contained courses.
This is the course registration card for 9th grade for B-CC. They told incoming parents that everyone takes honors English 9A/B and there is no on-level option. This is the same as years past.
It does look like they have a separate class for ELDs at certain levels, so maybe that is what they mean. If that is the case, the report is definitely misleading by stating that English 9A/B is an option. It's honors for all except for the few kids assigned to that class.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1omOjmST8HEQQ-BXftkgdPqZZyPH5waQ7qBa7mJvO5Fk/edit
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well well well...
"Three schools - Robert Frost, Takoma Park, and White Oak, offer Honors Algebra 2 at their school.
Students in other middle schools must attend a local high school to take that class."
This is the kind of thing that really bothers parents and MCPS could benefit from centralizing school course offerings rather than just leaving it up to administrators. I'm still trying to completely understand the methodology of the report. Is it that it is only offered at these three schools, or, is it that in Spring semester 2025 these were the only middle schools with kids actually taking the class? I think it is odd the Robert Clemente (up county math magnet) had no kids taking Algebra 2.
Oh, they do! They just have to wake up in the dead of night to go to a high school that's really far from their home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not trust this report. We are at B-CC. There is not on-level English classes. Only Honors (or AP/IB in grades 11/12). Maybe if you are ELD, they will put you in an on-level class, but not if you are an English speaker, even when you are performing below grade level. It is definitely honors for all, and that is why teachers do not actually teach an honors class. It is grade-level at best.
My kid is in Bridge at Churchill. Is there an SESES program at BCC? We have grade level classes in Bridge so I'm thinking that if BCC has a sp ed program, the regular classes might be for the self contained courses.
This is the course registration card for 9th grade for B-CC. They told incoming parents that everyone takes honors English 9A/B and there is no on-level option. This is the same as years past.
It does look like they have a separate class for ELDs at certain levels, so maybe that is what they mean. If that is the case, the report is definitely misleading by stating that English 9A/B is an option. It's honors for all except for the few kids assigned to that class.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1omOjmST8HEQQ-BXftkgdPqZZyPH5waQ7qBa7mJvO5Fk/edit
They probably use the on-level English as remedial. My kid's MS only had one section of on level English for remedial students then everyone else was placed in advanced English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not trust this report. We are at B-CC. There is not on-level English classes. Only Honors (or AP/IB in grades 11/12). Maybe if you are ELD, they will put you in an on-level class, but not if you are an English speaker, even when you are performing below grade level. It is definitely honors for all, and that is why teachers do not actually teach an honors class. It is grade-level at best.
My kid is in Bridge at Churchill. Is there an SESES program at BCC? We have grade level classes in Bridge so I'm thinking that if BCC has a sp ed program, the regular classes might be for the self contained courses.
This is the course registration card for 9th grade for B-CC. They told incoming parents that everyone takes honors English 9A/B and there is no on-level option. This is the same as years past.
It does look like they have a separate class for ELDs at certain levels, so maybe that is what they mean. If that is the case, the report is definitely misleading by stating that English 9A/B is an option. It's honors for all except for the few kids assigned to that class.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1omOjmST8HEQQ-BXftkgdPqZZyPH5waQ7qBa7mJvO5Fk/edit
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not trust this report. We are at B-CC. There is not on-level English classes. Only Honors (or AP/IB in grades 11/12). Maybe if you are ELD, they will put you in an on-level class, but not if you are an English speaker, even when you are performing below grade level. It is definitely honors for all, and that is why teachers do not actually teach an honors class. It is grade-level at best.
My kid is in Bridge at Churchill. Is there an SESES program at BCC? We have grade level classes in Bridge so I'm thinking that if BCC has a sp ed program, the regular classes might be for the self contained courses.