Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this means is teachers will be asked to do more without compensation. That’s how things always get done.
Without compensation? That’s horrible that teachers don’t get paid. I thought they collected salaries and benefits.
Funny. (/s) It’s the “more” that isn’t compensated and is making SPED teachers leave the profession and creating a hiring crisis for the district. I don’t teach SPED and I never would. You have no idea how much “extra” these teachers do in terms of paperwork and meetings. It’s unmanageable. How do you think FCPS is are going to perform the mandated audit of all SPED kids? Who do you think is going to perform the review of those 200,000 or so files in the next few months? Who else would know how to best evaluate the kids and figure out plans for learning acceleration or compensation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this means is teachers will be asked to do more without compensation. That’s how things always get done.
Without compensation? That’s horrible that teachers don’t get paid. I thought they collected salaries and benefits.
Funny. (/s) It’s the “more” that isn’t compensated and is making SPED teachers leave the profession and creating a hiring crisis for the district. I don’t teach SPED and I never would. You have no idea how much “extra” these teachers do in terms of paperwork and meetings. It’s unmanageable. How do you think FCPS is are going to perform the mandated audit of all SPED kids? Who do you think is going to perform the review of those 200,000 or so files in the next few months? Who else would know how to best evaluate the kids and figure out plans for learning acceleration or compensation?
Honest question - is there a way to provide administrative staff to SPED or classroom teachers to help with the paperwork?
DP. I'm a Special Education teacher and my supervisor asked about this at the meeting with the county. The answer was a big, fat NO. It will fall squarely on the shoulders of the teachers at each individual school to handle. There were 10 Special Education teachers in the room during our last meeting when this was brought up. Every single one of us plus our supervisor has a plan to leave the profession much sooner than we'd originally planned. I wouldn't be surprised if 2-3 people put in their notice after Winter Break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this means is teachers will be asked to do more without compensation. That’s how things always get done.
Without compensation? That’s horrible that teachers don’t get paid. I thought they collected salaries and benefits.
Funny. (/s) It’s the “more” that isn’t compensated and is making SPED teachers leave the profession and creating a hiring crisis for the district. I don’t teach SPED and I never would. You have no idea how much “extra” these teachers do in terms of paperwork and meetings. It’s unmanageable. How do you think FCPS is are going to perform the mandated audit of all SPED kids? Who do you think is going to perform the review of those 200,000 or so files in the next few months? Who else would know how to best evaluate the kids and figure out plans for learning acceleration or compensation?
Honest question - is there a way to provide administrative staff to SPED or classroom teachers to help with the paperwork?
Anonymous wrote:It’s time to put on big girl pants and move on. Pandemic impacted everyone 100% and not just the kids with special needs and disabilities. I hope we all (parents and schools) learned from it. I will forever appreciate the teachers and staff that did their jobs during an unimaginable situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this means is teachers will be asked to do more without compensation. That’s how things always get done.
Without compensation? That’s horrible that teachers don’t get paid. I thought they collected salaries and benefits.
Funny. (/s) It’s the “more” that isn’t compensated and is making SPED teachers leave the profession and creating a hiring crisis for the district. I don’t teach SPED and I never would. You have no idea how much “extra” these teachers do in terms of paperwork and meetings. It’s unmanageable. How do you think FCPS is are going to perform the mandated audit of all SPED kids? Who do you think is going to perform the review of those 200,000 or so files in the next few months? Who else would know how to best evaluate the kids and figure out plans for learning acceleration or compensation?
Anonymous wrote:It’s time to put on big girl pants and move on. Pandemic impacted everyone 100% and not just the kids with special needs and disabilities. I hope we all (parents and schools) learned from it. I will forever appreciate the teachers and staff that did their jobs during an unimaginable situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this means is teachers will be asked to do more without compensation. That’s how things always get done.
Without compensation? That’s horrible that teachers don’t get paid. I thought they collected salaries and benefits.
Funny. (/s) It’s the “more” that isn’t compensated and is making SPED teachers leave the profession and creating a hiring crisis for the district. I don’t teach SPED and I never would. You have no idea how much “extra” these teachers do in terms of paperwork and meetings. It’s unmanageable. How do you think FCPS is are going to perform the mandated audit of all SPED kids? Who do you think is going to perform the review of those 200,000 or so files in the next few months? Who else would know how to best evaluate the kids and figure out plans for learning acceleration or compensation?
Anonymous wrote:I was one of the parents who immediately emailed the email in the announcement and to our kids case manager about- how are these meetings going to be scheduled- just because I wanted to see the response.
Well, just got the response. The school has no guidance and doesn't expect any guidance until January. And the auto-email from the announcement said thet staff will be trained on the meetings and compensatory services in the next "2-3 months."
So short answer- FCPS has no plan for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was one of the parents who immediately emailed the email in the announcement and to our kids case manager about- how are these meetings going to be scheduled- just because I wanted to see the response.
Well, just got the response. The school has no guidance and doesn't expect any guidance until January. And the auto-email from the announcement said thet staff will be trained on the meetings and compensatory services in the next "2-3 months."
So short answer- FCPS has no plan for this.
Why did you immediately email the case manager, who is just a "lowly" teacher? Obviously, you were just trying to throw him/her under the bus, when you knew fair well that the case manager would not yet have an answer.![]()
You realize that your action, which is bullying, probably made your child's case manager, someone who is NOT responsible for the actions of the district two years ago, feel absolutely awful about him or herself, correct?
Anonymous wrote:I was one of the parents who immediately emailed the email in the announcement and to our kids case manager about- how are these meetings going to be scheduled- just because I wanted to see the response.
Well, just got the response. The school has no guidance and doesn't expect any guidance until January. And the auto-email from the announcement said thet staff will be trained on the meetings and compensatory services in the next "2-3 months."
So short answer- FCPS has no plan for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this means is teachers will be asked to do more without compensation. That’s how things always get done.
Without compensation? That’s horrible that teachers don’t get paid. I thought they collected salaries and benefits.
Anonymous wrote:All this means is teachers will be asked to do more without compensation. That’s how things always get done.
very expensive. The county only does that in very specific cases.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Free ride to lab school is a good start
Sure, FCPS is going to give thousands of kids 55k a year vouchers. Does the superintendent just hold a town hall where they announce that gen ed class size will now be set to the state limit, all specials cancelled, all after school activities cancelled, all improvements and maintenance cancelled, but impacted students with IEDs get a free ride to the SN school of their choice? I'm sure that would go over really well
I think Lab is more like 80k a year.
You might be thinking of Ivymount, which is around that price. I don't know if they take FCPS kids.
They did back in the day but I heard FCPS is no longer contracting with them. It was hearsay though. They are very different schools. But both ver