Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am proud to be a helicopter parent.
I am a proud free-range parent. I give DD a lot of independence and responsibility. But I will fight for her right to learn more challenging material in school when she is ready for it just as I fight for her right to walk to the park or take public transportation alone when she feels ready and able to do so. I don't see how this is a "helicopter parent" issue.
Anonymous wrote:I am proud to be a helicopter parent.
Anonymous wrote:Helicopter moms of Bethesda, unite!
Yes, this is sure to make the front page of the NYT. Your insistence that Sophie and Jack are entitled to be taught math coursework 2 or 3 grades ahead is absolutely a vital national news story.
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Wrong issue. The issue is to return the potential pathway for willing and able children to advance in math. The issue is not about grade levels though an appropriate grade level for an individual child may theoretically span -2, -1, on grade level up to +3 or +4 above grade levels. The issue is not about moving a certain fixed percentage ahead or demoting or delaying a fixed percentage of kids. Subject mastery should be data driven. This will avoid some of the issues in the past when incompetent teachers and principals advanced incompetent students too far (to the tune of 40 percent of the class).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He said that math acceleration has not been eliminated and will be provided to those who need it. My question is, how does MCPS determine who needs it? It certainly is not being provided in my kid's 3rd grade class. Everyone does the same thing.
Just might be that no one in your kids class deserves acceleration. By the way differentiation and acceleration are not the same.
I am not OP, but, honestly, it's hard to believe that in 3rd grade everyone are on the same level...
Well, it's easy for school to say that no one need acceleration, since there is no SOP to identify those kids... Wait, you might think that ES as a grade will show those who really excell and had to be challenged, hovewer, in our school none out of 50 kids in 1st grade never got ES as a grade![]()
Again, I'm sceptical that none of the desereved it...
Starr is contemptuous of parents. You can hear it in his voice and as a subtle undertone in all his comments. It was obvious during his parent forum on gifted ed.
He doesn't care what you think.
Anonymous wrote:Starr is contemptuous of parents. You can hear it in his voice and as a subtle undertone in all his comments. It was obvious during his parent forum on gifted ed.
He doesn't care what you think.
Helicopter moms of Bethesda, unite!
Yes, this is sure to make the front page of the NYT. Your insistence that Sophie and Jack are entitled to be taught math coursework 2 or 3 grades ahead is absolutely a vital national news story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the Pp, but would add that voting, too, is anonymous. We need to have a county-wide strike --where parents keep kids home to protest, or we picket in front of the schools. Something dramatic needs to happen in order to focus attention onto this mess. So far, MCPS hides behind misinformation, disinformation and a classic bureaucratic divide-and-conquer.
If parents marched and organized, do you really think the national news outlets could ignore the story?! I bet that would facilitate some answers, change and responsiveness from Starr and MCPS.
Helicopter moms of Bethesda, unite!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He said that math acceleration has not been eliminated and will be provided to those who need it. My question is, how does MCPS determine who needs it? It certainly is not being provided in my kid's 3rd grade class. Everyone does the same thing.
Just might be that no one in your kids class deserves acceleration. By the way differentiation and acceleration are not the same.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the Pp, but would add that voting, too, is anonymous. We need to have a county-wide strike --where parents keep kids home to protest, or we picket in front of the schools. Something dramatic needs to happen in order to focus attention onto this mess. So far, MCPS hides behind misinformation, disinformation and a classic bureaucratic divide-and-conquer.
If parents marched and organized, do you really think the national news outlets could ignore the story?! I bet that would facilitate some answers, change and responsiveness from Starr and MCPS.