Anonymous wrote:I am a Brent parent and it drives me mad that our teacher is do uncommunicative. She seems stressed and treats my questions like I asked her how to make sushi. I don't know why there can't be more updates about our kids. Not sure if she is the exception or this is a Brent teacher thing .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The premium put on relaxation is interesting -- especially when I look around and see kids who are on travel sports teams and have mutiple practices every week and games involving hours of travel time. I guess we all have our priorities, but I have no doubt that it is more likely for my DC to go to a good univerity than be drafted/recuited to play pro ball.
Interesting. I've wondered about the attraction/turn-off to BASIS for parents due to the lack of competitive sports and the impact of the workload on out school extra curriculars like competitive sports. Are there BASIS families who manage both or do the families pursuing non-school activities shy away from BASIS altogether even if it's appropriately challenging for their kids?
I'm in your camp on that one but still have a few years to decide on MS landing spots, including private options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The premium put on relaxation is interesting -- especially when I look around and see kids who are on travel sports teams and have mutiple practices every week and games involving hours of travel time. I guess we all have our priorities, but I have no doubt that it is more likely for my DC to go to a good univerity than be drafted/recuited to play pro ball.
Interesting. I've wondered about the attraction/turn-off to BASIS for parents due to the lack of competitive sports and the impact of the workload on out school extra curriculars like competitive sports. Are there BASIS families who manage both or do the families pursuing non-school activities shy away from BASIS altogether even if it's appropriately challenging for their kids?
I'm in your camp on that one but still have a few years to decide on MS landing spots, including private options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kindergarten field trip tied into classroom projects well. The students used the experience as a subject to explore in writer's workshop. They drew maps which ties into their social studies curriculum. If there are kindergarten parents who have concerns, I'm sure the teachers would gladly expand on how it ties in.
I don't doubt that there are potential improvements to the school, but nit picking a kindergarten field trip seems like an odd area of focus.
It's akin to the broken window theory of policing. Start with the small things that are easy to address, like holding teachers to a higher standard. Brent has some terrific teachers, but too many appear to be coasting. The principal promised that parents would be able meet with teachers in the morning (which was probably not permitted under the CBA) but they pushed back and it was dropped without further mention. This is important to families with two working parents who don't use the benefit of being able to talk to their child's teacher at 3:15. He also promised monthly meetings with interested parents, but never put that into action. I could go on, but there have been a number of initiatives announced at the end of each school year which apparently vanished into thin air.
Anonymous wrote:
The premium put on relaxation is interesting -- especially when I look around and see kids who are on travel sports teams and have mutiple practices every week and games involving hours of travel time. I guess we all have our priorities, but I have no doubt that it is more likely for my DC to go to a good univerity than be drafted/recuited to play pro ball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg! I thought the K field trip around the hood to the police, service/station, etc. Was pretty cool! Goes to show, no pleasing everyone.
Really? I thought it was eh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kindergarten field trip tied into classroom projects well. The students used the experience as a subject to explore in writer's workshop. They drew maps which ties into their social studies curriculum. If there are kindergarten parents who have concerns, I'm sure the teachers would gladly expand on how it ties in.
I don't doubt that there are potential improvements to the school, but nit picking a kindergarten field trip seems like an odd area of focus.
It's akin to the broken window theory of policing. Start with the small things that are easy to address, like holding teachers to a higher standard. Brent has some terrific teachers, but too many appear to be coasting. The principal promised that parents would be able meet with teachers in the morning (which was probably not permitted under the CBA) but they pushed back and it was dropped without further mention. This is important to families with two working parents who don't use the benefit of being able to talk to their child's teacher at 3:15. He also promised monthly meetings with interested parents, but never put that into action. I could go on, but there have been a number of initiatives announced at the end of each school year which apparently vanished into thin air.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The kindergarten field trip tied into classroom projects well. The students used the experience as a subject to explore in writer's workshop. They drew maps which ties into their social studies curriculum. If there are kindergarten parents who have concerns, I'm sure the teachers would gladly expand on how it ties in.
I don't doubt that there are potential improvements to the school, but nit picking a kindergarten field trip seems like an odd area of focus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^ stuart Hobson and Hardy are both reasonable safety schools and highly likely you could get a spot in 6th
Having lived across the street from Hobson until recently, I don't see it as a "reasonable safety school." No way. Believe it or not, police storm in to break up playground fights, with knives involved on occasion. I watched a parent get handcuffed on a squad car parked outside the school, last year with dozens of kids watching. Parents thronging the nearby sidewalk shouted "drug dealer!"
Hobson kids are often seriously rowdy when they come and go, hitting, tripping and pushing one another like mad. You see 8th grade girls dressed like hookers, to the extent possible in uniform, and hear plenty of foul language, which kids shout across E Street. Even if the honors classes are as challenging as parents claim, the peer group clearly isn't going to be acceptable to many (most?) Brent parents.
Anonymous wrote:^^ stuart Hobson and Hardy are both reasonable safety schools and highly likely you could get a spot in 6th