Anonymous wrote:Smaller class sizes -- at the very least in elementary school. The default mood of so many teachers and administrators is pure exasperation because there are just too many kids to rein in a classroom, in a grade, in a school. I think small children feed off that kind of noise and chaos and relentless adult negativity and subsequently up the ante attention/behavior-wise when they otherwise might not in a different context. Return the freaking Chromebooks and hire more teachers and build more schools.
Anonymous wrote:
+1
To be honest, I'd be happy with just #1. Not the color brochure that each of my kids has brought home written in education-speak. For the love of God, why can't my kid get a Math text book in the 5th grade? That could come home occasionally for me to peruse? I'm not against the new methods being taught under Common Core, but how am I supposed to know what they are? If my kid wants help understanding a concept, doesn't MCPS want me to be able to help her? Since nothing is provided to me, I have to fall back on the way I learned name-the-concept in the 5th grade 33 years ago.
Real world example: My kid has learned a different method of long division from her MCPS teacher. She is now doing division by decimals - but the way I learned to do this is not the way she's been taught. If I could read a textbook showing me how it's being taught, I could help her. Instead, I just confuse her by falling back on my old method. (and by the way, I have a hard time understanding what was so wrong with the old way, considering that I still perfectly well understand and remember how to do it 33 years later . . .)
This is what I want (AT THE VERY LEAST) from MCPS -
Webpage(s) that contains -
1) Detailed curriculum - broken down by grade level, subjects and quarters - AND that lists the textbooks (chapter #) and other resources that MCPS teachers use to teach, for each UNIT.
2) And that is easily accessible from MCPS and School websites. I hate that to reach any information I have to make multiple click throughs and then have a link that opens a PDF file. The usability of the website sucks!
3) And that the information is on the web page in plain HTML. I hate getting links that opens up DOC and PDF files.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Laptops -- and smartboards for that matter -- are useless classroom distractions if they don't alleviate the problem I see all too often -- teachers whose primary mode of interaction with their (too many) students is irritation. Seriously, when's the last time you were in a K-2 classroom?
Why are you so frequently in the classrooms of a large enough number of teachers for you to be able to generalize?
I'm not the PP, but I agree with her completely. I volunteer a ton at the ES, in both of my kids' classrooms. Being a teacher is tough, tough, tough. Especially when you are overworked, and have ridiculously large class sizes. And, when the Prometheum board sometimes works and sometimes doesn't. The Prometheum board is great for showing kids movies at recess, or at dismissal. Not for much else. I haven't talked to a single K teacher who raves about having the Prometheum board in her classroom.
Has your experience been different? I would love to hear about how you think the Prometheum board has increased learning in K/1st grade for your kids. Can you explain?

Anonymous wrote:My kids didn't have Promethean boards in K/1. They had them in older elementary grades, though, and reported that the teachers loved them.
However, I don't understand how this relates to the PP's statement that the teachers' primary mode of interaction with their students is irritation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids didn't have Promethean boards in K/1. They had them in older elementary grades, though, and reported that the teachers loved them.
However, I don't understand how this relates to the PP's statement that the teachers' primary mode of interaction with their students is irritation.
She's saying if less money was spent on the boards or chrome books, the school could higher additional help for the teacher and lessen the irritation.
Anonymous wrote:My kids didn't have Promethean boards in K/1. They had them in older elementary grades, though, and reported that the teachers loved them.
However, I don't understand how this relates to the PP's statement that the teachers' primary mode of interaction with their students is irritation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Laptops -- and smartboards for that matter -- are useless classroom distractions if they don't alleviate the problem I see all too often -- teachers whose primary mode of interaction with their (too many) students is irritation. Seriously, when's the last time you were in a K-2 classroom?
Why are you so frequently in the classrooms of a large enough number of teachers for you to be able to generalize?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Smaller class sizes -- at the very least in elementary school. The default mood of so many teachers and administrators is pure exasperation because there are just too many kids to rein in a classroom, in a grade, in a school. I think small children feed off that kind of noise and chaos and relentless adult negativity and subsequently up the ante attention/behavior-wise when they otherwise might not in a different context. Return the freaking Chromebooks and hire more teachers and build more schools.
Amen. Smaller class sizes, especially in early years. No one I know outside of MCPS has a kindergarten class as big as ours with only one teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Laptops -- and smartboards for that matter -- are useless classroom distractions if they don't alleviate the problem I see all too often -- teachers whose primary mode of interaction with their (too many) students is irritation. Seriously, when's the last time you were in a K-2 classroom?
Anonymous wrote:Smaller class sizes -- at the very least in elementary school. The default mood of so many teachers and administrators is pure exasperation because there are just too many kids to rein in a classroom, in a grade, in a school. I think small children feed off that kind of noise and chaos and relentless adult negativity and subsequently up the ante attention/behavior-wise when they otherwise might not in a different context. Return the freaking Chromebooks and hire more teachers and build more schools.