Anonymous wrote:"Develop a coaching plan for heterogeneous instruction, including language supports, in grades."
In which grades? Missed proofreading?
Also, they seem to be inconsistent about "Intermediate" and "Immediate" for goals with start date in 2023.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean they are getting rid of compacted to make sure that all kids receive the same curriculum?:
A change to the elementary mathematics course
structure and grouping practices that support all
students’ developing a solid mathematics foundation,
with increased rigor through heterogeneous grouping
(Special Education, Emergent Multilingual Learners, and
Focus Group Students)
Probably Yes. Check out this
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1EtpLRvaotYP5T0UgqQZ7mMtAH_6OMyKHs1ulZtZNhSc/edit
3.0
A change to the elementary mathematics course structure and grouping practices that support all students’ developing a solid mathematics foundation, with increased rigor through heterogeneous grouping (Special Education, Emergent Multilingual Learners, and Focus Group Students).
3.1
Develop new guidance for mathematics course placement in Grades 4&5. (Aligns with Recommendation 4.2)
3.2
Identify students in schools with small numbers of accelerated students to enter the virtual academy for Mathematics. (Aligns with Recommendation 4.2)
Anonymous wrote:The document reads like a lot of talking points that can be repeated by admin or turned into posters and PowerPoints. Very little concrete details. Most of it is already done in the schools. But at least it’s together in a flow chart now so admin can easily check boxes for (minimal) effort on staff training.
Anonymous wrote:Page 14 of the Action Plan defined "Equity" as
Equity means that every student, family, and staff member has the opportunities, resources, and supports necessary to succeed. Equity is the goal.
I thought Equity means equal outcome??
This is different from MCPS Core Values
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/about/mission/
Equity is WE BELIEVE that each and every student matters; outcomes should not be predictable by race, ethnicity, or socioeconomic status;
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:McKnight is an embarrassment and I'm furious MCPS spent so much money and we ended up with her anyway. I think having a non-white female would have been great but why her? I have never figured out what she has to offer. Because she doesn't have what it takes, it makes lots of women look bad.
I find her to be just infuriating. I want to hear what she has to say but she sounds like an idiot, and I don't sense she cares about these kids (her treatment of them during Covid was enough for me) and her inability to communicate effectively is humiliating for an adult in her position.
Agree. I guess nobody else wants the job.
MCPS is a large, dysfunctional, miserable school district on a downward trajectory. Hard to turn a ship this large around. Nobody wants to hop on a sinking ship.
Really? I think it's so much better today than when I attended a W back in the 90s. My kids are getting a much better education than I did, but I also try to ensure they get the most out of it. In fact, it's only dysfunctional for parents who expect the county to raise their kids.
So did I and the education is not better. The only better I see is writing and computer skills. They lack the basics in math in es. The no textbooks, little homework lacks any type of reinforcement. The lack of reading books is also bad too.
Your kids must be slow. Mine are in Algebra 2 in 8th. They didn't even offer that 20 years ago.
Just because Algebra 2 is being offered in 8th grade does not mean that it is being taught well.
Just look at the abysmal test results.
Agreed. My son is in the class now, easily earning As, but he still doesn't understand what he's doing. It's not even remotely like what I learned in Algebra II. No wonder I keep hearing that so many kids go on to struggle their first year in college.
Really? Your kid must be slow then. The curriculum is excellent. My kid managed to get a near perfect score on their MCAP even.
Maybe your kid did, but the majority of kids did not.
And a ‘near perfect’ score on MCAP? I’m pretty sure you are a troll.
My kid paid attention during the pandemic and actually shows up to class. Meanwhile your kids are passed out in the bathroom or vaping and you wonder why they are doing poorly.
If your kids are in-person now you shouldn't be so arrogant. You don't really actually know if they are going to class or just pretending.
Okay, while your kid watches TikTok videos during class mine doesn't have a phone and that is another reason why your child does poorly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean they are getting rid of compacted to make sure that all kids receive the same curriculum?:
A change to the elementary mathematics course
structure and grouping practices that support all
students’ developing a solid mathematics foundation,
with increased rigor through heterogeneous grouping
(Special Education, Emergent Multilingual Learners, and
Focus Group Students)
Probably Yes. Check out this
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1EtpLRvaotYP5T0UgqQZ7mMtAH_6OMyKHs1ulZtZNhSc/edit
3.0
A change to the elementary mathematics course structure and grouping practices that support all students’ developing a solid mathematics foundation, with increased rigor through heterogeneous grouping (Special Education, Emergent Multilingual Learners, and Focus Group Students).
3.1
Develop new guidance for mathematics course placement in Grades 4&5. (Aligns with Recommendation 4.2)
3.2
Identify students in schools with small numbers of accelerated students to enter the virtual academy for Mathematics. (Aligns with Recommendation 4.2)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean they are getting rid of compacted to make sure that all kids receive the same curriculum?:
A change to the elementary mathematics course
structure and grouping practices that support all
students’ developing a solid mathematics foundation,
with increased rigor through heterogeneous grouping
(Special Education, Emergent Multilingual Learners, and
Focus Group Students)
I have no idea. And that's the problem with MCPS and how it communicates. They're as clear as mud and they'll spend an insane amount of time, energy and resources saying things in a way that no one knows what the hell they actually mean.
And MONEY!! Don’t forget that MCPS wastes millions of dollars in taxpayer money on useless initiatives and useless Central Office staff that do nothing to promote education for students.
Anonymous wrote:Does this mean they are getting rid of compacted to make sure that all kids receive the same curriculum?:
A change to the elementary mathematics course
structure and grouping practices that support all
students’ developing a solid mathematics foundation,
with increased rigor through heterogeneous grouping
(Special Education, Emergent Multilingual Learners, and
Focus Group Students)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean they are getting rid of compacted to make sure that all kids receive the same curriculum?:
A change to the elementary mathematics course
structure and grouping practices that support all
students’ developing a solid mathematics foundation,
with increased rigor through heterogeneous grouping
(Special Education, Emergent Multilingual Learners, and
Focus Group Students)
I have no idea. And that's the problem with MCPS and how it communicates. They're as clear as mud and they'll spend an insane amount of time, energy and resources saying things in a way that no one knows what the hell they actually mean.
Anonymous wrote:The document reads like a lot of talking points that can be repeated by admin or turned into posters and PowerPoints. Very little concrete details. Most of it is already done in the schools. But at least it’s together in a flow chart now so admin can easily check boxes for (minimal) effort on staff training.