None of this BS this "teacher" is posting is relevant to the issue of achievement gap.
And the poster who said the Asian kids "struggling" with 2.0 but would beat the teacher in SAT's is dead on right. Lol
Anonymous wrote:I think that you have never been a teacher or a coach if you think that hard work is enough. I am thrilled with my students who show perseverance and I will always make time to work with them on strengthening their skills. But I can't award an A if they don't show me that they have mastered what they are supposed to learn. It would be unfair to them to pretend that they are at the top.
You really don't understand math or STEM. Perseverance is one is the most important traits in STEM. Its not dance class. Too many people lack perseverance and this is why so few people succeed in STEM (and end up with a liberal arts degree).
If you have high IQ students with strong work habits and perseverance then the problem is the way you are teaching. You give the grade for what is produced in the end. No need to inflate it but you need to take some responsibility for what you are delivering to your class.
I think that you have never been a teacher or a coach if you think that hard work is enough. I am thrilled with my students who show perseverance and I will always make time to work with them on strengthening their skills. But I can't award an A if they don't show me that they have mastered what they are supposed to learn. It would be unfair to them to pretend that they are at the top.
But none of this changes that fact that hard work doesn't always equal academic success.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS teacher here. With the new standards, hard work isn't enough to achieve academically.
WTH?? Hard work absolutely is enough to achieve academically. Its horrific to see a teacher posting this bias. Only a lazy instructor expects kids to fall wherever they land. Hard work, access to excellent teaching not sub par instructors, commitment, motivation, and dedication to learning yields success an a real academic environment much more than IQ. If you have high IQ and hard working students who are struggling look in the mirror!!!! Heck if you have average IQ and very hard working students who are struggling look in the mirror! Its you not the standard or the kid!
MCPS teacher here. With the new standards, hard work isn't enough to achieve academically.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS teacher here. With the new standards, hard work isn't enough to achieve academically. I have 6 Asian American students who are struggling. All are native English speakers with highly educated parents. They spend hours working on relatively simple assignments and still don't earn the A. Why? They haven't mastered the skill of applying what they've learned to a new situation/problem. When I speak with these students and their parents, they are studying through the old methods of drilling and memorization.
Oh bull shit. 2.0 is an idiots approach to math. I bet those kids would score higher than you on the SAT math and not have to take Remedial Math 101 for Education Majors in college.
MCPS teacher here. With the new standards, hard work isn't enough to achieve academically. I have 6 Asian American students who are struggling. All are native English speakers with highly educated parents. They spend hours working on relatively simple assignments and still don't earn the A. Why? They haven't mastered the skill of applying what they've learned to a new situation/problem. When I speak with these students and their parents, they are studying through the old methods of drilling and memorization.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are unequal because they are illegal. They broke the law and feed off of our taxes to survive in this country. Oh and hold all our kids back in their education. Sorry, you don't speak English, you are not equal in an English speaking American schools. I can not walk into a school in Spain and receive free Spanish classes so I can eventually learn the language and move forward. I have to learn Spanish before going to school. But then again, Spain doesn't let illegals run across their borders and enter school for free either.
I think you don't know much about Spain.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/05/world/europe/as-desperation-mounts-more-migrants-cast-their-lot-on-a-troubled-sea.html?_r=0
From this article: The impact was immediate: In 2006, a record 39,180 people reached Spain illegally by boat. Last year, the total was 3,804.
Wow. Almost 4000 people in all of Spain! We probably have 10 times that many just in MoCo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Asian communities you do not see the academic achievement gap between high and low SES students. Low SES students perform just as well and much of this is cultural expectations that given the opportunity you must do well. Asian communities put less emphasis on being born gifted and see academic achievement as a product of hard work.
MCPS teacher here. With the new standards, hard work isn't enough to achieve academically. I have 6 Asian American students who are struggling. All are native English speakers with highly educated parents. They spend hours working on relatively simple assignments and still don't earn the A. Why? They haven't mastered the skill of applying what they've learned to a new situation/problem. When I speak with these students and their parents, they are studying through the old methods of drilling and memorization.
Anonymous wrote:In Asian communities you do not see the academic achievement gap between high and low SES students. Low SES students perform just as well and much of this is cultural expectations that given the opportunity you must do well. Asian communities put less emphasis on being born gifted and see academic achievement as a product of hard work.
Anonymous wrote:In Asian communities you do not see the academic achievement gap between high and low SES students. Low SES students perform just as well and much of this is cultural expectations that given the opportunity you must do well. Asian communities put less emphasis on being born gifted and see academic achievement as a product of hard work.
This attitude is NOT present in american culture. American educational education expects that you are either born smart or you are not. There is an acceptance that US education is bad so if you work in US education whatever you do is good enough. The super smart kids will still succeed and the wealthy will opt out for private schools.
MCPS takes this one step forward and does nothing to reward or incentivize achievement for the middle class, immigrants, low, average, or bright students. I've never seen a school system that shuts out parental involvement, demotivates students, and acts to minimize or restrict achievement to the extent that 2.0 and MCPS does. The focus is clearly on the bottom bar and this is exactly why MCPS will never solve the achievement gap.
Latin american cultures trust the institution. Parental involvement in schools is very uncommon in latin american countries. It isn't an issue that they do not care about education but its a foreign concept to think you need to constantly supplement your child's education at home or push to be aware of how your child is performing in school.
If MCPS focused more on achievement of the individual student and delivered a quality curriculum the latin american students would do much better.
Latin culture trusts the institution? Have they seen their kid's tests scores? They just go with the flow. What a load of crap.