Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love to know if the 13 pages of complaints in this topic are from a variety of people or just a a few people posting over and over.
great question
Anonymous wrote:Curriculum 2.0 is not encouraging to the kids who are able to read and do math at a higher level as they are not able to receive accelerated learning.
Anonymous wrote:
I find it illogical that MCPS has no problem with differential groups for reading but does not allow differential groups for math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest is a first-grader and thus we've always had 2.0, and it seems totally fine to me. She's doing great. I think change is difficult for people, and I certainly sympathize with kids who had to start in one program and then switch -- it seems like it should have been rolled out year by year to avoid that difficult year or two where kids have to transition. But the sense of the first grade parents I talk to is, what's all this fuss about?
I have said this before, but I will repeat. You can't judge C2.0 based on how your kid is doing. For many kids, it is fine. I will even say that I have no problem with the material per se. My problem is that all kids have to learn at the same pace. As I said before, I have a kid that is progressing nicely with 2.0 and another kid who is way too advanced for this stuff. If you have an outlier kid who is either SN or HG, you just don't know what it is like to put them through school. If not handled properly, these kids will get completely turned off and lose all their natural curiosity. They will also disrupt other kids. Schools need to be able to handle different learning styles and diferent learning levels. Any parent with multiple kids can tell you that all kids are different, even if they have the same parents. It just seems like common sense to let kids learn at their own pace. My sense is that there is an ideology in the reform movement and in education that says we have to hold back some kids so they don't get too far ahead of disadvantaged kids. I am ok with spending extra money and resources on disadvantaged kids, but I am not ok with holding kids back.
Anonymous wrote:U.S. Schoolchildren Lag Asian Peers on Academic Tests
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-12-11/u-dot-...-asian-peers-on-academic-tests
Math, science scores for some US students improving, but lag behind many in Asia, Europe
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/math-scienc...2-8c8f-fbebf7ccab4e_story.html
The U.S. must start learning from Asia
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/12/07/school.resul...esai/index.html?iref=allsearch
U.S. students continue to trail Asian students in math, reading, science
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/us-s...2-ae43-cf491b837f7b_story.html
US 8th graders fail to score in global top 10 for math and science
http://www.theverge.com/2012/12/11/3753992/us-math-science-performance
Study: Asian countries outpace U.S. in science, math
http://www.ocregister.com/news/science-380278-students-math.html
International Tests Show East Asian Students Outperform World As U.S. Holds Steady
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/11/internati...nal-tests-show-_n_2273134.html
Curriculum 2.0 attempts to artificially close this expanding gap in MCPS between Asians and everyone else!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am an education professional, and my child started kindergarten this year at a school with a large FARMS population. Though i have no pre- Curriculum 2.0 experience, I have nothing but positive experiences to report. Within one week of starting school they had assessed his reading skills twice. He was placed in a reading group within his class and quickly put in an enriched reading group in another room twice a week. His reading skills have advanced 1 grade. By October the teacher set him up for math enrichment twice a week with the math specialist. They give him more advanced homework, which he sometimes will choose to do. I supplement his homework with workbooks, which he sometimes chooses to do. We are all happy!
Can you please keep your down to earth, practical, real world experiences to yourself? It totally detracts from my manufactured outrage and paranoia over my slightly above average kid not being lauded as a genius.