Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. My daughter is in K in DCPS and there are 22 kids in the class and two teachers. I thought most private schools had significantly smaller class sizes?
Your dcps class doesn't have two teachers. It has one teacher and an aide. At least at my dcps, aides are poorly educated and poorly paid and very uneven quality. And no aide after K, unless you're at one of the handful of schools where the pta pays for extra staff.
We went from 26 kids in a wotp dcps with one teacher to 18 kids in private, plus an additional math specialist during math class.
It really depends. I volunteered pre-covid in K and our aide was in college close to getting her teaching degree. She worked in small groups (as did the teacher). No, she wasn’t a credentialed, but yes two teachers were on the classroom. The other two aides at the school were similar.
Also, your post wreaks of privilege.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. My daughter is in K in DCPS and there are 22 kids in the class and two teachers. I thought most private schools had significantly smaller class sizes?
Your dcps class doesn't have two teachers. It has one teacher and an aide. At least at my dcps, aides are poorly educated and poorly paid and very uneven quality. And no aide after K, unless you're at one of the handful of schools where the pta pays for extra staff.
We went from 26 kids in a wotp dcps with one teacher to 18 kids in private, plus an additional math specialist during math class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. My daughter is in K in DCPS and there are 22 kids in the class and two teachers. I thought most private schools had significantly smaller class sizes?
Your dcps class doesn't have two teachers. It has one teacher and an aide. At least at my dcps, aides are poorly educated and poorly paid and very uneven quality. And no aide after K, unless you're at one of the handful of schools where the pta pays for extra staff.
We went from 26 kids in a wotp dcps with one teacher to 18 kids in private, plus an additional math specialist during math class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gds will be different with new campus. Check with admissions
Above is accurate. 22 in pK, 2 teachers. Two classes of 22 in play-based K (ie no reading groups). Three classes of 15-16 with one homeroom teacher, floating Aide and specialists thereafter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. My daughter is in K in DCPS and there are 22 kids in the class and two teachers. I thought most private schools had significantly smaller class sizes?
Our DCPS K class had a teacher and an aide, and 16 kids (Deal feeder). We found the aides to be wonderful PK3-K--in some cases, they even had kids attending the same school, and were really invested. We switched to private in 1st, and elementary classes have been a little large (18-20 kids) and no aide.
Anonymous wrote:Primary Day
16-17 students each in 2 K classes
2 lead teachers
Separate math and reading specialist to help lead teachers
Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. My daughter is in K in DCPS and there are 22 kids in the class and two teachers. I thought most private schools had significantly smaller class sizes?
Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. My daughter is in K in DCPS and there are 22 kids in the class and two teachers. I thought most private schools had significantly smaller class sizes?
Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. My daughter is in K in DCPS and there are 22 kids in the class and two teachers. I thought most private schools had significantly smaller class sizes?