Anonymous wrote:
We're French and prefer MCPS (our kids are in magnets) plus Saturday French classes at My French Classes, the francophone weekend school. I don't mind the French educational system, as I grew up with it in Paris, but the high school doesn't have a good reputation, so we decided to do MCPS from start to finish. We're in Bethesda, and our cluster is excellent.
I would never put my kids in the MCPS immersion program, which is conceptually wrong: it teaches US history in French. I went to a bilingual school where we had English lit and British history in English, plus French lit and French history in French, so double the workload. Teaching a country's history and culture in another language, without providing the history and culture of that other language at all, to children, rubs me completely the wrong way. To be really bilingual kids need biculturalism, and this is not what MCPS offers. History needs to be understand in that country's language.
Anonymous wrote:How has Rochambeau been handling distance learning? Are current families of younger kids (e.g. 1st grade) more or less satisfied (understanding that DL for this age group can be tough)?
Anonymous wrote:I was a lifer at Rochambeau. Did my nursery years at WIS, then moved over for 1st grade (it was much less expensive). I was one of te only Americans and as coming from a minority, single parent HH. Mom spoke zero French, but we were always treated with the utmost respect and consideration. It was all very rigid/structured, but no more so than what my cousins experienced growing up in the Caribbean and extremely helpful for an undiagnosed ADHD kid such as myself. Different home room teachers were willing to provide extra tutoring and help get homework done, so lack of French at home was never an issue.
I didn't graduate from Rochambeau because my family moved to another city on the east coast for the last few years of high school, but I did get my French bac and go on to an Ivy League college from there. To this day, my mother swears by the school and says she would do it all again (despite the rigidity)...
For better or for worse, the French system hardly ever changes, so what happened 10-20 years ago is likely to remain relevant today. Hope this helps a bit...
Writing from an iphone, so please forgive the typos.
Anonymous wrote:If you don't speak French and/or can't afford to donate financially above the tuition, you should avoid this school. When I went to the open house two years ago, I saw great videos about the English and French education. Complete fabrication, that's not what happens at all. Once your children go there, they only learn French. You will need both a French tutor for the loads of homework (starting 1st grade) and English tutor to keep your child from falling behind for their grade. I had meetings all the way to the Head of School to discuss their lack of English instruction and support for non-French families. I took both my children out in June, when I told them they didn't have to go back, they jumped for joy.
Anonymous wrote:If you don't speak French and/or can't afford to donate financially above the tuition, you should avoid this school. When I went to the open house two years ago, I saw great videos about the English and French education. Complete fabrication, that's not what happens at all. Once your children go there, they only learn French. You will need both a French tutor for the loads of homework (starting 1st grade) and English tutor to keep your child from falling behind for their grade. I had meetings all the way to the Head of School to discuss their lack of English instruction and support for non-French families. I took both my children out in June, when I told them they didn't have to go back, they jumped for joy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also suggest you research the potential move to a property off Rockville Pike. I live in that neighborhood and I don’t see how parents are going to access the new location (currently under contract) without sitting in the crawling traffic on Rockville pike between beltway and West Cedar. Morning drop off will be a nightmare.
That doesn't sound great. This may make us more likely to pay for bus service whenever this happens.