Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest and youngest is almost a decade apart in age. I will say MCPS has seriously slid downhill from where it was 10 years ago. My oldest received a decent education at a W school. We are now considering private for my youngest. The privates as far as class options, class size, and positivity in the school climate just seemed like a happier place to go to school when we toured them. Curriculum has a higher standard and they focus more on developing basic foundations with proven curriculums vs. the nightmare 2.0 debacle. There is also no need for wasted school days on PARCC instruction and assessments.
How much time did your oldest spend on MSA instruction and assessments?
Not as much as PARCC and the MSA was paper and pencil. With PARCC, the computers sometimes crash and loose the child's answers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My oldest and youngest is almost a decade apart in age. I will say MCPS has seriously slid downhill from where it was 10 years ago. My oldest received a decent education at a W school. We are now considering private for my youngest. The privates as far as class options, class size, and positivity in the school climate just seemed like a happier place to go to school when we toured them. Curriculum has a higher standard and they focus more on developing basic foundations with proven curriculums vs. the nightmare 2.0 debacle. There is also no need for wasted school days on PARCC instruction and assessments.
How much time did your oldest spend on MSA instruction and assessments?
Anonymous wrote:His phone number is 240 740 3215 — pressed submit too soon.
Anonymous wrote:My oldest and youngest is almost a decade apart in age. I will say MCPS has seriously slid downhill from where it was 10 years ago. My oldest received a decent education at a W school. We are now considering private for my youngest. The privates as far as class options, class size, and positivity in the school climate just seemed like a happier place to go to school when we toured them. Curriculum has a higher standard and they focus more on developing basic foundations with proven curriculums vs. the nightmare 2.0 debacle. There is also no need for wasted school days on PARCC instruction and assessments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither MCPS nor DCPS provide high quality education for K-12, unless you can access a small number of schools/programs for at least some of those grades:
MCPS: K-8 is a problem unless you’re in a CES or magnet. High school is generally better.
DCPS: A few good elementary schools exist, but then you’re up a creek unless you’re going to Deal or SWW.
I don’t see how the two systems are so different, when you look at K-12 education as a whole. They both have some pluses and a ton of minuses.
MPCS Does
DCPS doesn't.
It is as simple as that.
One is great not perfect (MCPS )
The other sucks in general (DCPS )
I'm not sure how this became a DC v. MoCo schools discussion, but I've lived in the area for decades and have not ever heard a friend say that they want to move into DC for the schools, whereas I've had many, many friends worry about what to do once their child is finished with the local DC public elementary school (which, at least in far NW DC, can be quite good).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither MCPS nor DCPS provide high quality education for K-12, unless you can access a small number of schools/programs for at least some of those grades:
MCPS: K-8 is a problem unless you’re in a CES or magnet. High school is generally better.
DCPS: A few good elementary schools exist, but then you’re up a creek unless you’re going to Deal or SWW.
I don’t see how the two systems are so different, when you look at K-12 education as a whole. They both have some pluses and a ton of minuses.
MPCS Does
DCPS doesn't.
It is as simple as that.
One is great not perfect (MCPS )
The other sucks in general (DCPS )
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes the problem is created by MCPS.
The rezoning of the new RM ES#5 was such an example. MCPS threw in two options for the rezoning that were non-starters to begin with, but it forced the parents in the effected areas to rally against those options. A lot of speaking time for the community was taken up by these parent, when that time could've been used for the community to actually debate and discuss the viable options. It was a waste of time for everyone to have to address these non-starter options that should never have been put on the table to begin with.
That was all on MCPS, and I was hugely disappointed with how they handled the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:I'd like to here from a non-CES/HGC or non-Magnet school. We don't live near any and the logistics are not feasible for our family or most of our school pyramid's families.
Doesn't that tell you something if the only families satisfied are the handful that go to CES and magnet programs in 500 sq mile county district?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Town run schools—that’s one difference. Less diffuse. Parents feel more in control.
Local is always better. Lots of child specific and neighborhood specific issues that have nothing to do with each other across totally different neighborhoods one hour drive away in traffic.
No, it's not. Sometimes it's better. Sometimes it's worse.
Anonymous wrote:Neither MCPS nor DCPS provide high quality education for K-12, unless you can access a small number of schools/programs for at least some of those grades:
MCPS: K-8 is a problem unless you’re in a CES or magnet. High school is generally better.
DCPS: A few good elementary schools exist, but then you’re up a creek unless you’re going to Deal or SWW.
I don’t see how the two systems are so different, when you look at K-12 education as a whole. They both have some pluses and a ton of minuses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Town run schools—that’s one difference. Less diffuse. Parents feel more in control.
Local is always better. Lots of child specific and neighborhood specific issues that have nothing to do with each other across totally different neighborhoods one hour drive away in traffic.
Anonymous wrote:Town run schools—that’s one difference. Less diffuse. Parents feel more in control.