Anonymous wrote:
I'm still confused! How will MCPS address the math learning gaps -- particularly in high school math classes? Will the curriculum that wasn't covered this year, be move to math next year or will they simply not cover it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m having trouble understanding what this means. My son is a 6th grader taking AIM. Next year it will be either Algebra 1 or Grade 7 math even though it states that AIM misses critical pieces of pre algebra even before the pandemic? And how will math placement be determined?
Your kid will be fine going on to Algebra. Mine skipped Aim and went directly to algebra and its fine.
Anonymous wrote:I’m having trouble understanding what this means. My son is a 6th grader taking AIM. Next year it will be either Algebra 1 or Grade 7 math even though it states that AIM misses critical pieces of pre algebra even before the pandemic? And how will math placement be determined?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. How do I know if my 4th grader, who is in 4/5 math, will continue to 5/6 math next year?
It sounds like the school will inform you.
Someone on here posted recently that it will be very few of the kids who are currently in compacted math. Any idea what the percentage will be? My kid is in compacted and I fully expect him to not be selected for the higher group.
That assertion was later walked back. I still don't know if the OP of that thread got bad intel, or whether MCPS changed their minds under pressure from principals, but the bar moved from "unreasonably high" to "regular high"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. How do I know if my 4th grader, who is in 4/5 math, will continue to 5/6 math next year?
It sounds like the school will inform you.
Someone on here posted recently that it will be very few of the kids who are currently in compacted math. Any idea what the percentage will be? My kid is in compacted and I fully expect him to not be selected for the higher group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. How do I know if my 4th grader, who is in 4/5 math, will continue to 5/6 math next year?
It sounds like the school will inform you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if DC is finishing up 5/6 math, she can go on to AIM in 6th, right?
It's a possible, but not guaranteed, pathway. Here's what they say about going on to AIM in 6th:
Students are being centrally identified for C2.0 A.I.M.6. Schools will be provided a list of students, who surfaced for local enriched programs, and guidance criteria by the Accelerated and Enriched Instruction team. Parents will be notified directly, if their child has been identified. (As a placeholder, until students are identified by AEI, C2.0 A.I.M.6. should be considered for students who have excelled in Distance Learning.) C2.0 A.I.M.6. omitts critical standards that are required for Algebra 1. The omitted standards combined with ~⅓ of the Math 6 content omitted during Distance Learning makes this pathway tenuous given the number of MCAP failures in normal years.
Students who have demonstrated the need for accelerated learning and show insignificant gaps during Spring 2020 COL and 2020-2021 Distance Learning may benefit from the accelerated path. This path will have students complete Algebra 1 in Grade 7. Students considered for this pathway should have consistently high external data as measured by MCAP and MAP.
They also discuss two other pathways that would slow down acceleration by a year: Either 5/6 --> Math 7 --> Math 8 --> Algebra 1 in 8th grade OR 5/6 --> AMP 6+ (combines math 6 with half of math 7) --> AMP 7+ --> Algebra 1 in 8th grade.
Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. How do I know if my 4th grader, who is in 4/5 math, will continue to 5/6 math next year?
Anonymous wrote:Why is the pathway from math 5/6 to AIM highlighted bright red? My son was already identified for AIM 6 based on teacher recommendation so does this mean his assignment for next year may still change?
Anonymous wrote:So if DC is finishing up 5/6 math, she can go on to AIM in 6th, right?
Students are being centrally identified for C2.0 A.I.M.6. Schools will be provided a list of students, who surfaced for local enriched programs, and guidance criteria by the Accelerated and Enriched Instruction team. Parents will be notified directly, if their child has been identified. (As a placeholder, until students are identified by AEI, C2.0 A.I.M.6. should be considered for students who have excelled in Distance Learning.) C2.0 A.I.M.6. omitts critical standards that are required for Algebra 1. The omitted standards combined with ~⅓ of the Math 6 content omitted during Distance Learning makes this pathway tenuous given the number of MCAP failures in normal years.
Students who have demonstrated the need for accelerated learning and show insignificant gaps during Spring 2020 COL and 2020-2021 Distance Learning may benefit from the accelerated path. This path will have students complete Algebra 1 in Grade 7. Students considered for this pathway should have consistently high external data as measured by MCAP and MAP.