Sounds like most of us are in agreement with what is wrong:
1. lack of differentiation. I hear at some schools they move kids up for math. Others not so much
2. forcing strategies on the kids when they don't need them.
Anonymous wrote:Too bad mcps won't post the resumes of the teachers who were plucked from obscurity (random schools) and got sweet gigs (hired by their pals) to write the curriculum. I think most people wound be shocked by the lack of expertise or basic tenure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's what I hate about mcps math- it's appallingly slow. My second grader is bored and seems to be doing the same easy worksheet over and over. Teacher says some kids are way behind so she can't move quicker.
They differentiate in our kid's class - second grade. I visited once when they were doing math and there were three groups - one obviously higher than the others in what the kids were doing.
Same with ours. However this might be a new thing.
Anonymous wrote:
Yes! My daughter was adding/subtracting in the thousands in 1st (she was put in 2nd grade math.) My daughter is currently in 1st and she is doing adding/subtracting up to 6 this week. 6!!!!! She learned that in fours preschool. They also haven't taught them anything about money. No learning to tell time. My daughter knows them both but they haven't been in the curriculum. She also has no spelling words. I was told at conferences they don't expect kids in 1st to spell. Just learn how to write phonetically.The have a small set of word wall words they need to know by the end of the year. My daughter already knowing how to spell them. So now what? Nothing. Bored to tears. No enrichment. Sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the minority. Love 2.0 math. I have one advanced and one on grade level 2.0 math student. I also have a pre-2.0 student who struggled for years with the old curriculum. Supplement at home if it feels too slow (my son would attempt his older sisters homework for challenge). I really believe my kids have developed a deep understanding of math thanks to the strategies and repetition. They can solve difficult problems in their heads and explain how they got the answer. Most importantly, they can apply their skills to novel problems. I'm not a mathematician or a teacher so maybe I'm missing something, but it works well for us.
I have a long list of MCPS complaints but math instruction isn't one of them.
I agree with you. My DD has about 3 or 4 worksheets per night with one or two being a "challenge" for extra points. We require her to do the challenge since the general worksheets can be done very quickly. Once in a while my DH, who has engineering degrees from MIT and Standford, complains that the work is too repetive because DD has to solve a problem in multiple ways. That said, he admits it is more challenging then what he was doing in 3rd grade.
I like it and as someone who attended math night at our mcps school, I learned that the reason they teach kids to solve problems in multiple ways is to allow them to eventually chose the strategy that works for them. I was horrible math student and I believe these strategies might have made all the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the minority. Love 2.0 math. I have one advanced and one on grade level 2.0 math student. I also have a pre-2.0 student who struggled for years with the old curriculum. Supplement at home if it feels too slow (my son would attempt his older sisters homework for challenge). I really believe my kids have developed a deep understanding of math thanks to the strategies and repetition. They can solve difficult problems in their heads and explain how they got the answer. Most importantly, they can apply their skills to novel problems. I'm not a mathematician or a teacher so maybe I'm missing something, but it works well for us.
I have a long list of MCPS complaints but math instruction isn't one of them.
I agree with you. My DD has about 3 or 4 worksheets per night with one or two being a "challenge" for extra points. We require her to do the challenge since the general worksheets can be done very quickly. Once in a while my DH, who has engineering degrees from MIT and Standford, complains that the work is too repetive because DD has to solve a problem in multiple ways. That said, he admits it is more challenging then what he was doing in 3rd grade.
I like it and as someone who attended math night at our mcps school, I learned that the reason they teach kids to solve problems in multiple ways is to allow them to eventually chose the strategy that works for them. I was horrible math student and I believe these strategies might have made all the difference.
If a child is truly struggling with a concept, it would make sense to teach that student a different method which maybe would clear things up. But what they are doing is requiring every student to demonstrate proficiency in every model and this doesn't leave the time for simple practice calculating and becoming fluent with an algorithm. This is actually a misinterpretation of the standards and just an if some is good more must be better mindset. It's a waist of time and energy and anyone who understood the first method won't understand any better learning three more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the minority. Love 2.0 math. I have one advanced and one on grade level 2.0 math student. I also have a pre-2.0 student who struggled for years with the old curriculum. Supplement at home if it feels too slow (my son would attempt his older sisters homework for challenge). I really believe my kids have developed a deep understanding of math thanks to the strategies and repetition. They can solve difficult problems in their heads and explain how they got the answer. Most importantly, they can apply their skills to novel problems. I'm not a mathematician or a teacher so maybe I'm missing something, but it works well for us.
I have a long list of MCPS complaints but math instruction isn't one of them.
I agree with you. My DD has about 3 or 4 worksheets per night with one or two being a "challenge" for extra points. We require her to do the challenge since the general worksheets can be done very quickly. Once in a while my DH, who has engineering degrees from MIT and Standford, complains that the work is too repetive because DD has to solve a problem in multiple ways. That said, he admits it is more challenging then what he was doing in 3rd grade.
I like it and as someone who attended math night at our mcps school, I learned that the reason they teach kids to solve problems in multiple ways is to allow them to eventually chose the strategy that works for them. I was horrible math student and I believe these strategies might have made all the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in the minority. Love 2.0 math. I have one advanced and one on grade level 2.0 math student. I also have a pre-2.0 student who struggled for years with the old curriculum. Supplement at home if it feels too slow (my son would attempt his older sisters homework for challenge). I really believe my kids have developed a deep understanding of math thanks to the strategies and repetition. They can solve difficult problems in their heads and explain how they got the answer. Most importantly, they can apply their skills to novel problems. I'm not a mathematician or a teacher so maybe I'm missing something, but it works well for us.
I have a long list of MCPS complaints but math instruction isn't one of them.
I agree with you. My DD has about 3 or 4 worksheets per night with one or two being a "challenge" for extra points. We require her to do the challenge since the general worksheets can be done very quickly. Once in a while my DH, who has engineering degrees from MIT and Standford, complains that the work is too repetive because DD has to solve a problem in multiple ways. That said, he admits it is more challenging then what he was doing in 3rd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's what I hate about mcps math- it's appallingly slow. My second grader is bored and seems to be doing the same easy worksheet over and over. Teacher says some kids are way behind so she can't move quicker.
Yes! My daughter was adding/subtracting in the thousands in 1st (she was put in 2nd grade math.) My daughter is currently in 1st and she is doing adding/subtracting up to 6 this week. 6!!!!! She learned that in fours preschool. They also haven't taught them anything about money. No learning to tell time. My daughter knows them both but they haven't been in the curriculum. She also has no spelling words. I was told at conferences they don't expect kids in 1st to spell. Just learn how to write phonetically.The have a small set of word wall words they need to know by the end of the year. My daughter already knowing how to spell them. So now what? Nothing. Bored to tears. No enrichment. Sad.
Anonymous wrote:Here's what I hate about mcps math- it's appallingly slow. My second grader is bored and seems to be doing the same easy worksheet over and over. Teacher says some kids are way behind so she can't move quicker.
The have a small set of word wall words they need to know by the end of the year. My daughter already knowing how to spell them. So now what? Nothing. Bored to tears. No enrichment. Sad.