I'm curious - as my child has not yet entered school - is the problem with 2.0 just math - or is it everything? Most of the criticism I have heard is about the math curriculum. Are the other subjects equally concerning?
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious - as my child has not yet entered school - is the problem with 2.0 just math - or is it everything? Most of the criticism I have heard is about the math curriculum. Are the other subjects equally concerning?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know what we parents can do to get rid of 2.0?
My husband and I are contacting our representatives in Annapolis. We are also going to throw our votes to anyone running for office who does not support 2.0 no matter what their position is on any other issue. I'm not sure if 2.0 is getting funding from Annapolis but if so it should be eliminated.
Look at who the Maryland governor has appointed to serve on the State Board of Education. Almost none have any background or formal training in education. Total crap. This decision to go with a system like 2.0 ultimately rests with the Governor, the State Board of Education, Starr, and the MCPS Board of Education. You want change, they all have to go.
Life long Democrat here. I feel totally railroaded and disenfranchised over this issue. Will through my money, time, effort, and vote to anyone willing to challenge 2.0. As I see it, that is our only option.
I am much like the OP. I have a 1st grader who has been under this curriculum since kindergarten and it all seems fine to me. He seems to be adept at math and is doing the more challenging of the worksheets that come home -- in fact, doing things I don't remember doing until later grades. He likes school and he comes home with lots of reports of interesting work. What is all this talk of disaster and betrayal and corrupt politicians? Some of these posters really need to relax.
If your kid loves math and knows more than the teacher, then bring them home and give them your own worksheets from 3:30-8:00 and chill out.
OK, thanks for the warnings and honest opinions. Though I would like people to consider the possibility that overenthusiastic acceleration also has significant risks. I went to a highly ranked liberal arts college that was full of very burnt out young people whose parents likely thought that they had done right by their children. Also, your "see where your child is at graduation" betrays your own competitive streak. Perhaps this is just about parents wanting to win.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am much like the OP. I have a 1st grader who has been under this curriculum since kindergarten and it all seems fine to me. He seems to be adept at math and is doing the more challenging of the worksheets that come home -- in fact, doing things I don't remember doing until later grades. He likes school and he comes home with lots of reports of interesting work. What is all this talk of disaster and betrayal and corrupt politicians? Some of these posters really need to relax.
If your kid loves math and knows more than the teacher, then bring them home and give them your own worksheets from 3:30-8:00 and chill out.
Most parents I talk with don't feel like you PP. Some of us older parents know what came before 2.0, even what came before Everyday Math, so we have seen the decline in the curriculum over a wider period of time than the two years your child has vested in the system. You may not realize how much the current system sucks because you and your child have nothing to compare it to.
Good luck. See where your child is at graduation. I am using Singapore Math with my child at home so my child will be prepared for the real world. Some parents don't have the time, energy, and resources to supplement privately and frankly, since kids spend 6 hours of day at school, private supplementation shouldn't be necessary. But supplementation at this stage in the game is necessary because MCPS is failing our kids.
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I am much like the OP. I have a 1st grader who has been under this curriculum since kindergarten and it all seems fine to me. He seems to be adept at math and is doing the more challenging of the worksheets that come home -- in fact, doing things I don't remember doing until later grades. He likes school and he comes home with lots of reports of interesting work. What is all this talk of disaster and betrayal and corrupt politicians? Some of these posters really need to relax.
If your kid loves math and knows more than the teacher, then bring them home and give them your own worksheets from 3:30-8:00 and chill out