Anonymous wrote:The new Gilded Age (Education version) is going to remain in place for the foreseeable future. North Arlington and McLean will continue to prosper while S. Arl, Sleepy Hollow and Herndon will continue to decline on the VDOE school report cards and GreatSchools.
Anonymous wrote:It frustrates me to no end that we look only to schools to equalize all members of society. Either support programs to reduce the income and access gap across all of society, or just admit we aren't willing to and be ok with poor kids having poor outcomes in life.
The idea that we look to a bunch of teachers to do what we as a society aren't willing to is futile and unfair.
Anonymous wrote:It frustrates me to no end that we look only to schools to equalize all members of society. Either support programs to reduce the income and access gap across all of society, or just admit we aren't willing to and be ok with poor kids having poor outcomes in life.
The idea that we look to a bunch of teachers to do what we as a society aren't willing to is futile and unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My hot take: The long-term returns to taking above grade-level math (eventually going beyond calculus BC while in high school) are minimal relative to simply being good at math and taking whatever grade-level class the smart kids usually take. There simply aren't many college majors or career paths where it makes a difference. It's almost entirely a college application padding contest.
Agreed. I went to summer school during H.S. to get ahead in math and take AP calc. to look good on college apps. I have never once used calculus since.
I used to think this, but then realized it teaches complex problem solving.
DP. It does, but only for the kids who have done the complex problem solving along the way. Strong math teaching that helps kids understand math and numbers and critical thinking is much better than racing through a text book to be able to do well on a standardized test.
The problem though is that there are no metrics for really showing that this is being taught in other classrooms. I can barely get out of my child what they are doing in class much less whether my child is picking up on every lesson taught. Nothing comes home. No more homework, workbooks, or textbooks. Classes are entirely teacher dependent. So I support AP classes because I know they are challenging and at least require to some degree that a teacher make sure students are at least exposed to advanced topics. I also know the final goal of the class and can see if my child achieved the goals. Many of these other classes my child has taken have lofty goals but don't work in practice because of bad implementation, lack of materials, varied abilities from children, or lazy teaching.
Starting in 3rd grade, all schools have periodic testing to make sure kids are learning the curriculum, you might not see the scores, but administration does and it puts a lot of pressure on teachers. Trust me, classes are not entirely teacher dependent. They have to teach a certain curriculum (that you can see online) and if there students don't test well, they hear it from administration. And no, I'm not talking about the highly publicized tests like the SOLs, but end of unit tests that are computerized and make it possible for principals to easily compare each teacher's scores against anothers.
Anonymous wrote:The special education inclusion model doesn't work. SN kids have to fight for what they need and NT kids find their own education disrupted or poorly funded at the same time. I don't know what the solution is, but the current model doesn't seem to be good for anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Secular, classical education is where it's at- we need educated, critical thinkers, armed with facts and humility-- not more iPads and 21st century "skills."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most accelerated kids are garden-variety bright, not gifted.
Is this ever true. I was recently invited in to a fb parents group for "gifted" kids and it is mostly filled with questions from parents with es aged students trying to figure out how to get into the accelerated programs.
In America, most success is from grit, not high IQ. So I'm not sure why you think this is a controversial or an especially keen insight.
American k-12 education is a joke, anyone with SOME motivation can ace all their high school classes. Over 50% of American high school seniors have an A average. All A's and a decent ACT/SAT score gets you into UMD/UVA. Grind a little harder and you're in top 20 private territory.
I disagree. I see a lot of people "succeed" in getting into good colleges and getting well-paying jobs as a result of being born to families with plenty of money and good connections. These are not necessarily the smartest people or the people who work the hardest; they are the people born into wealth and privilege. When they make mistakes, the consequences are muted by their family's money and prestige. They continually "fail upwards."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My hot take: The long-term returns to taking above grade-level math (eventually going beyond calculus BC while in high school) are minimal relative to simply being good at math and taking whatever grade-level class the smart kids usually take. There simply aren't many college majors or career paths where it makes a difference. It's almost entirely a college application padding contest.
Agreed. I went to summer school during H.S. to get ahead in math and take AP calc. to look good on college apps. I have never once used calculus since.
I used to think this, but then realized it teaches complex problem solving.
DP. It does, but only for the kids who have done the complex problem solving along the way. Strong math teaching that helps kids understand math and numbers and critical thinking is much better than racing through a text book to be able to do well on a standardized test.
The problem though is that there are no metrics for really showing that this is being taught in other classrooms. I can barely get out of my child what they are doing in class much less whether my child is picking up on every lesson taught. Nothing comes home. No more homework, workbooks, or textbooks. Classes are entirely teacher dependent. So I support AP classes because I know they are challenging and at least require to some degree that a teacher make sure students are at least exposed to advanced topics. I also know the final goal of the class and can see if my child achieved the goals. Many of these other classes my child has taken have lofty goals but don't work in practice because of bad implementation, lack of materials, varied abilities from children, or lazy teaching.
Starting in 3rd grade, all schools have periodic testing to make sure kids are learning the curriculum, you might not see the scores, but administration does and it puts a lot of pressure on teachers. Trust me, classes are not entirely teacher dependent. They have to teach a certain curriculum (that you can see online) and if there students don't test well, they hear it from administration. And no, I'm not talking about the highly publicized tests like the SOLs, but end of unit tests that are computerized and make it possible for principals to easily compare each teacher's scores against anothers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My hot take: The long-term returns to taking above grade-level math (eventually going beyond calculus BC while in high school) are minimal relative to simply being good at math and taking whatever grade-level class the smart kids usually take. There simply aren't many college majors or career paths where it makes a difference. It's almost entirely a college application padding contest.
Agreed. I went to summer school during H.S. to get ahead in math and take AP calc. to look good on college apps. I have never once used calculus since.
I used to think this, but then realized it teaches complex problem solving.
DP. It does, but only for the kids who have done the complex problem solving along the way. Strong math teaching that helps kids understand math and numbers and critical thinking is much better than racing through a text book to be able to do well on a standardized test.
The problem though is that there are no metrics for really showing that this is being taught in other classrooms. I can barely get out of my child what they are doing in class much less whether my child is picking up on every lesson taught. Nothing comes home. No more homework, workbooks, or textbooks. Classes are entirely teacher dependent. So I support AP classes because I know they are challenging and at least require to some degree that a teacher make sure students are at least exposed to advanced topics. I also know the final goal of the class and can see if my child achieved the goals. Many of these other classes my child has taken have lofty goals but don't work in practice because of bad implementation, lack of materials, varied abilities from children, or lazy teaching.