Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are in PK 4 and it's just awful. The teacher is even less motivated than the kids. It's painful for everyone. Sometimes "class" is dismissed after 7 minutes. They get about 30 minutes a day total. I can't switch out because it was a lottery seat at a highly regarded DCPS where my older son has done great.
I had to enroll her in 4 outschool classes, which show that virtual learning CAN work for this age. She loves her "princess PK" and "Playdoh Club" and "Animal Alphabet".
Oh so that happens in other classes too? Yeah, both of my kid's main teachers rarely stay on for more than 15 minutes and there's clearly no lesson plan. Library is usually less than 10, which is less time than it takes me to get the child seated and still in front of the computer! Our "PE" teacher has stopped logging in other than to say "watch the YouTube video I posted!"
What are these people being paid to do?
Just an FYI your kid isn't the only kid in the classroom. I can't speak for other teachers but my pk students get 70 minutes everyday, including Wednesday. They also don't cry anymore, which is great. We've really gotten into a routine. And thank god for props!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are in PK 4 and it's just awful. The teacher is even less motivated than the kids. It's painful for everyone. Sometimes "class" is dismissed after 7 minutes. They get about 30 minutes a day total. I can't switch out because it was a lottery seat at a highly regarded DCPS where my older son has done great.
I had to enroll her in 4 outschool classes, which show that virtual learning CAN work for this age. She loves her "princess PK" and "Playdoh Club" and "Animal Alphabet".
Oh so that happens in other classes too? Yeah, both of my kid's main teachers rarely stay on for more than 15 minutes and there's clearly no lesson plan. Library is usually less than 10, which is less time than it takes me to get the child seated and still in front of the computer! Our "PE" teacher has stopped logging in other than to say "watch the YouTube video I posted!"
What are these people being paid to do?
Anonymous wrote:I will respond as an outlier. It’s going truly fine for my prek3 child. She’s excited about logging in to her live sessions each day and is engaged in the content even though she’s never met her teachers or classmates in person. From what I can tell about 80% of her classmates are also logging in regularly to both the large group and small group sessions, which is much higher than I anticipated. Some of the other kids are pretty disengaged but most are good at participating.
It’s not a substitute for actual school and I cannot wait until she is actually back full time, but I have been pleasantly surprised by the experience.
Anonymous wrote:We pulled our daughter out of DCPS mostly due to switch to virtual and kept her in pre-k in her daycare. And it's going pretty well.
I think your question was more about people who kept kids in, but not an option for us.
For those of you doing prek at home, do you work and how do you handle that?
Anonymous wrote:We are in PK 4 and it's just awful. The teacher is even less motivated than the kids. It's painful for everyone. Sometimes "class" is dismissed after 7 minutes. They get about 30 minutes a day total. I can't switch out because it was a lottery seat at a highly regarded DCPS where my older son has done great.
I had to enroll her in 4 outschool classes, which show that virtual learning CAN work for this age. She loves her "princess PK" and "Playdoh Club" and "Animal Alphabet".