Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30-31 in WJ cluster ES 4th grade class. One teacher. Crazy.
And 29-30 in the 3rd Grade. Ashburton (WJ Cluster)
Anonymous wrote:30-31 in WJ cluster ES 4th grade class. One teacher. Crazy.
Anonymous wrote:
This are is more expensive, I suppose, which affects teacher salary.
I have a child with special needs and large class sizes materially affect his behavior and academics. It's sad to think that so many of us struggle to find accommodations for our children in special ed resource classrooms (which also cost the taxpayer money), when their needs might actually be met by smaller classes. The alternative is expensive private school, and not just any school, as you just said (parochials also have large classes), which many of us cannot afford.
Anonymous wrote:One of the issues is the size of the school district. It's probably true that everywhere you are aware of has 26 kids in a class, but there are a lot of schools with many fewer. My child's first grade class has 16 students, but we're at a Title I school that most DCUM parents would never deign to consider. But...the point is that we pay a ton in taxes, but those taxes are distributed across a socioeconomically diverse county. If MCPS were split into three districts (North, East, West), there would be a massive achievement gap but folks in the West and North would get smaller classes, probably.
Anonymous wrote:The question; why?
The answer… illegal immigration.
Anonymous wrote:The question; why?
The answer… illegal immigration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This are is more expensive, I suppose, which affects teacher salary.
I have a child with special needs and large class sizes materially affect his behavior and academics. It's sad to think that so many of us struggle to find accommodations for our children in special ed resource classrooms (which also cost the taxpayer money), when their needs might actually be met by smaller classes. The alternative is expensive private school, and not just any school, as you just said (parochials also have large classes), which many of us cannot afford.
This.
And the MCPS teachers are also living in tiny houses & apartments and sending their own children to overcrowded classes.
My child's teacher sends her 2 kids to private school. That speaks volumes to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This are is more expensive, I suppose, which affects teacher salary.
I have a child with special needs and large class sizes materially affect his behavior and academics. It's sad to think that so many of us struggle to find accommodations for our children in special ed resource classrooms (which also cost the taxpayer money), when their needs might actually be met by smaller classes. The alternative is expensive private school, and not just any school, as you just said (parochials also have large classes), which many of us cannot afford.
This.
And the MCPS teachers are also living in tiny houses & apartments and sending their own children to overcrowded classes.