From what I see, most of the chinese people I know who works in DC choose to live in Virginia. I am not sure school is the only reason. But it has to be part of the reason. MCPS does seem to be more politically correct than fairfax, for example.
Anonymous wrote: How do you know this? If you actually have a child in algebra, maybe they don't have a good teacher? Maybe your school is not providing good support? How do you know they will not do well on an exam that has never been taken?
Anonymous wrote:And I really wonder how you can be so certain that scores will drop. My crystal ball doesn't work that well.
Try looking at your data for once. You know which demographics score high regardless of teacher performance. They leave, you lose your score boosters.
Anonymous wrote: Middle school Algebra is a mess. The teachers don't even know what is going on. These kids will not do well on a national exam.
How do you know this? If you actually have a child in algebra, maybe they don't have a good teacher? Maybe your school is not providing good support? How do you know they will not do well on an exam that has never been taken?
Anonymous wrote:And I really wonder how you can be so certain that scores will drop. My crystal ball doesn't work that well.
Try looking at your data for once. You know which demographics score high regardless of teacher performance. They leave, you lose your score boosters.
Anonymous wrote:Math scores will be a disaster. PARCC isn't going to ask the kids to draw circles to add 2+2. Its a harder rather than easier tests and the kids will not be prepared. The kids are not being taught math fluency. Middle school Algebra is a mess. The teachers don't even know what is going on. These kids will not do well on a national exam.
And I really wonder how you can be so certain that scores will drop. My crystal ball doesn't work that well.
Although I understand your comment, I really can't stand this type of reasoning. One should be able to expect exceptional public schools. Period. That proposition should be entirely separate from private schools.
Take DC as a cautionary tale. I have long believed that the fact that there were so many good private schools (and, well, so many good local suburban schools that folks could move to), meant that there wasn't enough focus on fixing the problem with the public schools. Let's not let that happen to MCPS. Let's instead keep the pressure on in order to make MCPS the best it can be. Let's not go down that futile road of "if you don't like it, send your kid to private school."
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't expect changes in 2 years. Can you afford private school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are thinking about sending your child to MCPS, please don't base your decision on the stuff you read on DCUM! A lot of the complaining about Curriculum 2.0 is just complaining by complainers. If they didn't have Curriculum 2.0 to complain about, they would complain about something else. You should talk to real actual people in real actual life who send their children to the real actual schools in the neighborhoods you're considering.
Best advice you'll get today.