Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't understand why this man, who is a leader in the MC Latino Advocacy Coalition, isn't making it his job to spread the word about these programs instead of whining that there are Latinos who are unaware of these programs.
Good point. Isn't that his job?
No, it isn't. It's the job of MCPS to get information about MCPS to MCPS parents. Right?
MCPS puts a ton of information out there, in many different languages, on paper, on their website, by telephone. It is not possible for MCPS officials to go door to door and have conversations. If this guy wants to advocate for the Latino community, he needs to get on it and stop feeling free to sit back and let everyone else do the work of informing his community.
Nobody is saying that MCPS should go door-to-door. But if you're supposed to get the information out to people, but the people aren't getting it, then you're not doing your job properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't understand why this man, who is a leader in the MC Latino Advocacy Coalition, isn't making it his job to spread the word about these programs instead of whining that there are Latinos who are unaware of these programs.
Good point. Isn't that his job?
No, it isn't. It's the job of MCPS to get information about MCPS to MCPS parents. Right?
MCPS puts a ton of information out there, in many different languages, on paper, on their website, by telephone. It is not possible for MCPS officials to go door to door and have conversations. If this guy wants to advocate for the Latino community, he needs to get on it and stop feeling free to sit back and let everyone else do the work of informing his community.
Nobody is saying that MCPS should go door-to-door. But if you're supposed to get the information out to people, but the people aren't getting it, then you're not doing your job properly.
Anonymous wrote:Read this thread. What more do you want MCPS to do. You can't force a horse to drink water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't understand why this man, who is a leader in the MC Latino Advocacy Coalition, isn't making it his job to spread the word about these programs instead of whining that there are Latinos who are unaware of these programs.
Good point. Isn't that his job?
No, it isn't. It's the job of MCPS to get information about MCPS to MCPS parents. Right?
MCPS puts a ton of information out there, in many different languages, on paper, on their website, by telephone. It is not possible for MCPS officials to go door to door and have conversations. If this guy wants to advocate for the Latino community, he needs to get on it and stop feeling free to sit back and let everyone else do the work of informing his community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the achievement gap is strongly linked to the deficiencies in MCPS's curriculum. I think it is especially weak in elementary, failing to give kids the foundation they need. (My kids are now in high school, so they were pre 2.0. I would like to think things have changed for the better, but that is not my impression). I think well-educated parents recognize that a student isn't where they need to be and fills in the gaps, either through tutoring or helping out at home. When I was teaching my kids how to hold a pencil, or use a dictionary, or do 3rd grade math without a calculator, I wasn't considering it test prep. I think my kids would have had a problem succeeding in the magnet program without these skills (and others), however.
Originally, I had expected the schools to educate my child and I would only need to help with the occasional homework problem, but that's not what I found. I suspect that other parents may also rely on MCPS to educate their children. Certainly parents who can't speak English, or who are busy working two jobs to put food on the table, or who don't have a solid academic background themselves, may not realize there are gaps they need to supplement, or may be unable to fill the gaps even if they do.
Strengthen elementary education. Get a content-rich curriculum (with textbooks) that has been proven to work. Grade student work for correctness, not just completion. Give students grades that mean something rather than the current I, P, E system that nobody seems to know how to interpret. I think this would be your best shot at decreasing the racial/SES gap.
Don't agree.
Its actually been proven that the achievement gap is primarily due to summer brain drain. Want to close the gap? Extend the school day and school year for lower performing kids. This would require the death of teacher's unions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This quote is from the article:
“It is outrageous,” said Diego Uriburu, co-chair of the Montgomery County Latino Advocacy Coalition. “There are great inequities in terms of access. The majority of our families don’t even know these programs exist.”
Sorry, I don't buy this. I have a second grader in MCPS. I received TWO phone calls about the Parent Questionnaire and BOTH were translated completely in Spanish.
The questionnaire itself was also translated in Spanish.
If your phone number is in the directory, then you also received this message. We're at a Title 1 School, so I completely understand that some people have more barriers than others, but the above quote is just ridiculous.
I don't understand why this man, who is a leader in the MC Latino Advocacy Coalition, isn't making it his job to spread the word about these programs instead of whining that there are Latinos who are unaware of these programs.
Good point. Isn't that his job?
Anonymous wrote:I see Jeff went thru here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't understand why this man, who is a leader in the MC Latino Advocacy Coalition, isn't making it his job to spread the word about these programs instead of whining that there are Latinos who are unaware of these programs.
Good point. Isn't that his job?
No, it isn't. It's the job of MCPS to get information about MCPS to MCPS parents. Right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't understand why this man, who is a leader in the MC Latino Advocacy Coalition, isn't making it his job to spread the word about these programs instead of whining that there are Latinos who are unaware of these programs.
Good point. Isn't that his job?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We are probably going to end up suggesting ds take this path from magnet MS - UMD for undergrad to save money for grad school. How has it worked out for your kids and their peers?
it is working out well for our two kids - both received full ride scholarships from umd. DC1 is getting his engineering phd (fully funded) @ "top 5" engineering school and DC2 wants to go to med school so we are saving 529 money for that purpose. DC2 will be able to come out of med school without debt/loan. i am 100% sure they couldn't do it without mcps magnet programs.
so, yeah, it's fine. kids always have to deal with "you worked that hard for umd?" or "you settled with umd?" comments but other than that it's all good. coming out of umd with high gpa is much harder than people think.
Thanks - this is really heartening. Congrats to your kids - they have worked really hard for their success and they sound very pragmatic.
I know the Engineering program has an excellent rep. How are the pre-med majors? Has dc2 been able to do the research or internships that would help him/her apply to med school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This quote is from the article:
“It is outrageous,” said Diego Uriburu, co-chair of the Montgomery County Latino Advocacy Coalition. “There are great inequities in terms of access. The majority of our families don’t even know these programs exist.”
Sorry, I don't buy this. I have a second grader in MCPS. I received TWO phone calls about the Parent Questionnaire and BOTH were translated completely in Spanish.
The questionnaire itself was also translated in Spanish.
If your phone number is in the directory, then you also received this message. We're at a Title 1 School, so I completely understand that some people have more barriers than others, but the above quote is just ridiculous.
I don't understand why this man, who is a leader in the MC Latino Advocacy Coalition, isn't making it his job to spread the word about these programs instead of whining that there are Latinos who are unaware of these programs.
Good point. Isn't that his job?