Anonymous wrote:You are the biggest predictor of your child’s success. The home situation. Are you always on your phone? Do you read for pleasure (not on a device)? Do you take the kids to concerts and botanical gardens and theater? Do you expect A’s- at MCPS, you should. Take AP classes as soon as you can. Expect A’s in those classes, too. Always be putting a little bit of distance between your child and their peer group. Never get tired of saying things like- I know Your Friend is allowed to.., you aren’t. Just… be better than the culture that is producing these dumbed down schools and your kids will thrive. Ask the Gaithersburg mom.
Anonymous wrote:I advise people to leave their MCPS bubble once in a while. Even at its worst, MCPS provides a higher level of education and college prep than most of the country. Could it see some changes and improvements? Of course. Nobody is perfect. But to act as if MCPS is somehow not A level education is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I advise people to leave their MCPS bubble once in a while. Even at its worst, MCPS provides a higher level of education and college prep than most of the country. Could it see some changes and improvements? Of course. Nobody is perfect. But to act as if MCPS is somehow not A level education is ridiculous.
The MSDE Report Card shows that MCPS does not offer A-level education.
For the 2025 MSDE Report Card, at each level, MCPS earned
Elementary
Academic Achievement 11.2 out of 20
Middle
Academic Achievement 10.2 out of 20
High
Academic Achievement 15.4 out of 30
In what world do scores like THAT in Academic Achievement equal A-level education? Pull your head out of the sand. Or stop lying. Either rather, the truth is plainly seen and felt by parents and students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I advise people to leave their MCPS bubble once in a while. Even at its worst, MCPS provides a higher level of education and college prep than most of the country. Could it see some changes and improvements? Of course. Nobody is perfect. But to act as if MCPS is somehow not A level education is ridiculous.
That's not really true. If you look at it by state and compare similar demographic groups you'd be surprised which states are on top. MCPS does an absolutely horrific job educating Black, Latino and low-income kids.
Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a kid who is starting middle school next year at a pretty average school - can you share experiences of what makes the difference for a kid to be successful in school in MCPS?
Are the academic standards the same school to school? Or are kids in Potomac/ Bethesda held to higher standards since they may often arrive better prepared to learn?
What can a parent do to help their child succeed, that MCPS may not offer everywhere.
I am concerned that teachers don’t seem to set homework at all and when they do they don’t grade it or even notice of the kids do it.
How can a parent get some sense their kids on the right track?
I don’t like stressing about this stuff, but as a Mom I need some reassurance I am putting the right things in place to help my kid do well ( and balance that with being happy). We are already seeing that elementary school teachers tell the kids HW is optional so the kids don’t want to do it.
Please share your best practices and ideas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is very successful at Gaithersburg and will be most likely be accepted at every college they apply at. Work ethic and effort translates no matter which school you attend.
Thanks - I agree! But how do you cultivate that if it’s not there? And how do you keep it going when kids all around don’t have one?
Anonymous wrote:I advise people to leave their MCPS bubble once in a while. Even at its worst, MCPS provides a higher level of education and college prep than most of the country. Could it see some changes and improvements? Of course. Nobody is perfect. But to act as if MCPS is somehow not A level education is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:I advise people to leave their MCPS bubble once in a while. Even at its worst, MCPS provides a higher level of education and college prep than most of the country. Could it see some changes and improvements? Of course. Nobody is perfect. But to act as if MCPS is somehow not A level education is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I moved so my kids could attend Bethesda-area schools, but the recipe is the same everywhere, OP. You enrich at home, and you ensure that your kids are in the most advanced track they can sustain for their IQ, organizational skills and processing speed. This will look different for every kid, but the point is to seek an appropriate level of challenge, to learn for its own sake, and for college admissions positioning.
For one of my kids, this meant following the regular advanced track to AP level. For the other one, who is gifted, it meant starting Algebra 1 in 6th grade upon special request and sleeping or reading classics through all the grades until she met some challenge in AP Calc BC and AP Physics C.
Do not hesitate hiring individual tutors for your kids, as soon as they seem unsure or their grades drop to a B, especially in math, where each year builds on the other (chemistry and physics depend on a good math understanding as well). And insist on getting your kid to read as much as they can, good quality literature, because MCPS' Achilles' heel is the English curriculum. Unless they get do well in AP Lang and AP Lit, they will not be ready for the rigors of college writing.
you sound nuts! My kid went to an average school and did well. Take APs and your kid will be fine. if they need that much tutoring, then maybe they shouldn't expect to go to high academic college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is very successful at Gaithersburg and will be most likely be accepted at every college they apply at. Work ethic and effort translates no matter which school you attend.
Thanks - I agree! But how do you cultivate that if it’s not there? And how do you keep it going when kids all around don’t have one?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. And you will be the difference maker. In an average MCPS school, you'll have to supplement like crazy if the goal is for you kid to leave middle school with a great education.
MCPS is not good at providing high quality instruction in its average schools. Your kid will get C-level academic instruction and experiences, with maybe a bright spot with a teacher/subject or two.
You're definitely a troll and have no idea of what you're talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is very successful at Gaithersburg and will be most likely be accepted at every college they apply at. Work ethic and effort translates no matter which school you attend.
Thanks - I agree! But how do you cultivate that if it’s not there? And how do you keep it going when kids all around don’t have one?
Anonymous wrote:Yes. And you will be the difference maker. In an average MCPS school, you'll have to supplement like crazy if the goal is for you kid to leave middle school with a great education.
MCPS is not good at providing high quality instruction in its average schools. Your kid will get C-level academic instruction and experiences, with maybe a bright spot with a teacher/subject or two.