Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, it's a teacher in-joke? I mean no one's teaching first graders education theory and the technique can be put to use without a label. Not the best place for a pun. Petty point, but still.
No, it's a common educational exercise, cleverly titled, and you didn't
A) catch the reference; or
B) bother to Google it, which would've saved you a post here.
But bitch about teachers, 'cause that's fun.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Come on, people. “Cloze” has been used for years in education. When you do cloze activities, you fill in words that make sense that are missing in sentences.
It was a play on words that was obviously missed by you all.
http://study.com/academy/lesson/cloze-procedure-technique-and-definition.html
I've never heard of it and my youngest is currently in 2nd grade. So maybe it has been "used for years" but that certainly doesn't mean that every parent has heard the term. There's no need to be a dick about it.
But it's interesting to see how OP reacted, jumping to the conclusion that it was a misspelling. Parents jump to the same conclusions about the way they teach math now. All these parents, thinking they know better than trained teachers, challenging them at every turn, prattling on about Pearson, etc. Like parents are education experts or something. It's truly baffling.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm not a teacher. I'm a parent. I'm just annoyed as FUCK at all these other parents who carry on like they know more than the teachers, second-guessing them at every turn. You should see the hysteria over Common Core math. All these ignorant parents upset and taking to social media to profess outrage over the fact that aren't teaching math the way they were taught, not realizing that in fact they didn't really learn anything about number sense.
The arrogance is palpable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. I'm also not blaming MCPS for using these worksheets. I'm blaming the person/company who developed them for not using good judgement in being cute with the heading.
I blame MCPS. If you are trying to teach 1st graders how to spell, don't give them a worksheet with CLOSE spelled wrong. That is how 6/7yr olds will see it unless it is explained to them and even then it would go over half their heads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!
They don't want you trying to explain it to your child because so many parents contradict the (better) methods used at school. Haven't you seen the belligerent Facebook posts/memes about Common Core from idiot parents who don't understand all they learned in the 70s and 80s were algorithms?
Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!
They don't want you trying to explain it to your child because so many parents contradict the (better) methods used at school. Haven't you seen the belligerent Facebook posts/memes about Common Core from idiot parents who don't understand all they learned in the 70s and 80s were algorithms?
Wait, so when your child doesn't understand something you tell them "sorry, I can't help you. Your teacher doesn't want me to." I am finally realizing why kids are failing PARCC and finals so bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!
My child's MCPS elementary school has an annual math curriculum night for the parents that is very helpful. If I were you, I would ask the principal for something like that at your child's school.
So one school has one night where some parents might be able to come out and that helps, what? 1-2% of the parents in the county to understand.
If there needs to be curriculum nights to explain things, I think it is a proven point that it is too confusing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!
They don't want you trying to explain it to your child because so many parents contradict the (better) methods used at school. Haven't you seen the belligerent Facebook posts/memes about Common Core from idiot parents who don't understand all they learned in the 70s and 80s were algorithms?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!
My child's MCPS elementary school has an annual math curriculum night for the parents that is very helpful. If I were you, I would ask the principal for something like that at your child's school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, it's a teacher in-joke? I mean no one's teaching first graders education theory and the technique can be put to use without a label. Not the best place for a pun. Petty point, but still.
No, it's a common educational exercise, cleverly titled, and you didn't
A) catch the reference; or
B) bother to Google it, which would've saved you a post here.
But bitch about teachers, 'cause that's fun.![]()
Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!
Anonymous wrote:So, it's a teacher in-joke? I mean no one's teaching first graders education theory and the technique can be put to use without a label. Not the best place for a pun. Petty point, but still.
Anonymous wrote:So wait, another huge communication error from MCPS? Who would have thought...
I am still figuring out why my 1st grader has to pull numbers from a basic addition problem and show 700 ways to do it. They wonder why parents think it is all nonsense. there are ZERO workbooks, textbooks, or communication from the teachers. So for me, this 2.0 sucks because I can't even explain to my 6yr old why she needs to do it this way. UGH!