Anonymous wrote:Everybody calm down. Yesterday the Wilson Beacon, the school newspaper, reported that the Chancellor's office said it would be up to the Principal to decide if they would do the 4X4 schedule, and she said she would not do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has this been done at any other school in DC before?
Or is this experiment being rolled out everywhere at once?
My understanding is that this is how most of the other schools work but Wilson has been an outlier. I got confirmation from an Assistant Principal that DCPS is making Wilson shift to this schedule.
I think the reason why they have not communicated it to parents is because they themselves don't want to implement it and plus they probably need to think through how it will work before communicating with us.
So I think I'm ready to start emailing Mr. Pinder
Contact Email:
david.pinder@dc.gov
Not how it works at Ellington or SWW. Don't know what happens at any of the other comprehensives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has this been done at any other school in DC before?
Or is this experiment being rolled out everywhere at once?
My understanding is that this is how most of the other schools work but Wilson has been an outlier. I got confirmation from an Assistant Principal that DCPS is making Wilson shift to this schedule.
I think the reason why they have not communicated it to parents is because they themselves don't want to implement it and plus they probably need to think through how it will work before communicating with us.
So I think I'm ready to start emailing Mr. Pinder
Contact Email:
david.pinder@dc.gov
Anonymous wrote:Has this been done at any other school in DC before?
Or is this experiment being rolled out everywhere at once?
Anonymous wrote:Has this been done at any other school in DC before?
Or is this experiment being rolled out everywhere at once?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't that leave very few slots for anything ther than "core" courses?
Same number of classes in the end. Seems like it would encourage students to add more challenging courses, though, because they wouldn't have to deal with 6 APs at once, only 3 per semester.
Pretty sure that you can count on one hand the # of DCPS kids who take 6 AP classes in one year. Even the highest achievers struggle with 5. Put AP chem or physics in there and you have your hands completely full.
And no, this schedule would encourage my child to take fewer AP classes, because for any that occurred first semester, she would be at a huge disadvantage on a national test on which most kids were completing the class right before taking the test, whereas she would have had 5 months to forget the material.
For the IB diploma, students take 6 or 7 tests, more challenging than AP classes, in one year.
Anonymous wrote:Is there even time in the 2nd semester to teach the entire content of an AP class before the early May test dates?
Anonymous wrote:It was announced at the faculty meeting last Monday. The teacher I talked to said it was presented as a "non-negotiable" from DCPS -- it doesn't seem that teachers (or administration?) are being asked what's best for their school and students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't that leave very few slots for anything ther than "core" courses?
Same number of classes in the end. Seems like it would encourage students to add more challenging courses, though, because they wouldn't have to deal with 6 APs at once, only 3 per semester.
Pretty sure that you can count on one hand the # of DCPS kids who take 6 AP classes in one year. Even the highest achievers struggle with 5. Put AP chem or physics in there and you have your hands completely full.
And no, this schedule would encourage my child to take fewer AP classes, because for any that occurred first semester, she would be at a huge disadvantage on a national test on which most kids were completing the class right before taking the test, whereas she would have had 5 months to forget the material.