Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
The teacher shouldn't slow down the class and the parents should supplement if the kids need more help.
I can not help but visualize this as follows:
The school is a bananaboat.. the teacher is a driver of the motorboat that pulls it. The speed of the bananaboat is dictated
by the driver who tries to drive as fast as humanly possible. The kids are dropping off the bananaboat right left and center
but the few strongest ones, the ones that have been blessed by early birth dates or redshirting, have stonger hands, and also
they are supplemented by their parents who have been on banana boat before and know the rules so they have them excersize
at home day and night so once they are on the damn boat they won't let go. So the driver of the boat looks behind
and see nothing but kids flying in all directions but as long as he sees few kids holding on he keeps cranking up the speed
to see at which point he has to slow down to maintain the crazy speed with few strongest individual holding on.
This is what it means to teach to the few strongest kids.
First, in the advanced classes there are more than just the few 'strongest' kids. Second, if you're not advanced ,you catch up first, otherwise you won't even fit in your proverbial bananaboat.
Lady, your analogies are odd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
And why should they? If you can't stand the heat, go back to regular math.
Some schools aren’t offering regular math because they serve parents who all think their children are advanced. The school is delivering what the consumer wants —like vanity sized clothing.
Which middle school isn't offering regular math?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
The teacher shouldn't slow down the class and the parents should supplement if the kids need more help.
I can not help but visualize this as follows:
The school is a bananaboat.. the teacher is a driver of the motorboat that pulls it. The speed of the bananaboat is dictated
by the driver who tries to drive as fast as humanly possible. The kids are dropping off the bananaboat right left and center
but the few strongest ones, the ones that have been blessed by early birth dates or redshirting, have stonger hands, and also
they are supplemented by their parents who have been on banana boat before and know the rules so they have them excersize
at home day and night so once they are on the damn boat they won't let go. So the driver of the boat looks behind
and see nothing but kids flying in all directions but as long as he sees few kids holding on he keeps cranking up the speed
to see at which point he has to slow down to maintain the crazy speed with few strongest individual holding on.
This is what it means to teach to the few strongest kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
And why should they? If you can't stand the heat, go back to regular math.
Some schools aren’t offering regular math because they serve parents who all think their children are advanced. The school is delivering what the consumer wants —like vanity sized clothing.
Which middle school isn't offering regular math?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Were there kids who scored in the 99th percentile within MCPS (vs 99 percentile nationally). Who didn’t get in the magnets? I don’t remember anyone like that posting when the results come out, but of course that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
Yes absolutely. My kid was at a regional CES and there were only 8 kid admitted across all three CES classes. There were many really high scoring kids who did not get into the Magnet MS.
MCPS changed the MS Magnets around last year. Instead of pulling just the highest scoring kids, they took lower scoring students who scored high relative to others at their lower performing schools. In other words, a kid with an 89%ile score at a lower performing school would get in over a 99%ile kid at a school with lots of 99%ile kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Were there kids who scored in the 99th percentile within MCPS (vs 99 percentile nationally). Who didn’t get in the magnets? I don’t remember anyone like that posting when the results come out, but of course that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
Yes it happens.
It also happens that some don't get in at the MS age, but get in for HS.
Anonymous wrote:Were there kids who scored in the 99th percentile within MCPS (vs 99 percentile nationally). Who didn’t get in the magnets? I don’t remember anyone like that posting when the results come out, but of course that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
Anonymous wrote:Were there kids who scored in the 99th percentile within MCPS (vs 99 percentile nationally). Who didn’t get in the magnets? I don’t remember anyone like that posting when the results come out, but of course that doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
And why should they? If you can't stand the heat, go back to regular math.
Some schools aren’t offering regular math because they serve parents who all think their children are advanced. The school is delivering what the consumer wants —like vanity sized clothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
And why should they? If you can't stand the heat, go back to regular math.
Anonymous wrote:My kid went from a regional CES to the home MS. 99% for MAP scores.
She likes the AIM HIGH courses. English is pretty sad because it’s mixed ability English and there are some kids who have trouble writing basic sentences. Science has been good because she has a good teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
The teacher shouldn't slow down the class and the parents should supplement if the kids need more help.
I can not help but visualize this as follows:
The school is a bananaboat.. the teacher is a driver of the motorboat that pulls it. The speed of the bananaboat is dictated
by the driver who tries to drive as fast as humanly possible. The kids are dropping off the bananaboat right left and center
but the few strongest ones, the ones that have been blessed by early birth dates or redshirting, have stonger hands, and also
they are supplemented by their parents who have been on banana boat before and know the rules so they have them excersize
at home day and night so once they are on the damn boat they won't let go. So the driver of the boat looks behind
and see nothing but kids flying in all directions but as long as he sees few kids holding on he keeps cranking up the speed
to see at which point he has to slow down to maintain the crazy speed with few strongest individual holding on.
This is what it means to teach to the few strongest kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Interestingly, there are some kids who were placed in AIM who were not in Compacted Math. They find it incredibly difficult, but the teacher doesn’t seem to be slowing the class down on their behalf.
The teacher shouldn't slow down the class and the parents should supplement if the kids need more help.
I can not help but visualize this as follows:
The school is a bananaboat.. the teacher is a driver of the motorboat that pulls it. The speed of the bananaboat is dictated
by the driver who tries to drive as fast as humanly possible. The kids are dropping off the bananaboat right left and center
but the few strongest ones, the ones that have been blessed by early birth dates or redshirting, have stonger hands, and also
they are supplemented by their parents who have been on banana boat before and know the rules so they have them excersize
at home day and night so once they are on the damn boat they won't let go. So the driver of the boat looks behind
and see nothing but kids flying in all directions but as long as he sees few kids holding on he keeps cranking up the speed
to see at which point he has to slow down to maintain the crazy speed with few strongest individual holding on.
This is what it means to teach to the few strongest kids.