Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP Lang and AP Lit are the English classes where students are held to higher standards of writing. Unfortunately they don't come until 11th and 12 th grades.
I’m the teacher who posted above. IB English is also great for writing instruction. 3 of the 4 major assessments are essay-based, so teachers spend a lot of class time looking at strong writing samples and having students compose their own. (The 4th assessment is an oral component.)
The problem is students often aren’t prepared for AP or IB work at the start of 11th grade. The IB middle years program is one way to counteract this, but most schools don’t have it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can it be you are just noticing it now? Thats what shocking to me? We worked with our kids in ES and MS to make sure they could write well.
This really is the school’s primary job. Really. Your point fails because there are plenty of parents who are not able to help identify, much less correct writing deficiencies for a variety of reasons.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS does not teach grammar, spelling, and writing skills depending on the teacher. Only a few give feedback and help kids improve. You need to pay attention as a parent and help your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP Lang and AP Lit are the English classes where students are held to higher standards of writing. Unfortunately they don't come until 11th and 12 th grades.
Lol
That’s waaaaaaaaay too late.
Why not start in elementary school…like the Catholics do?
Anonymous wrote:They should just learn how to use chatgpt
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP Lang and AP Lit are the English classes where students are held to higher standards of writing. Unfortunately they don't come until 11th and 12 th grades.
I’m the teacher who posted above. IB English is also great for writing instruction. 3 of the 4 major assessments are essay-based, so teachers spend a lot of class time looking at strong writing samples and having students compose their own. (The 4th assessment is an oral component.)
The problem is students often aren’t prepared for AP or IB work at the start of 11th grade. The IB middle years program is one way to counteract this, but most schools don’t have it.
Anonymous wrote:AP Lang and AP Lit are the English classes where students are held to higher standards of writing. Unfortunately they don't come until 11th and 12 th grades.
Anonymous wrote:AP Lang and AP Lit are the English classes where students are held to higher standards of writing. Unfortunately they don't come until 11th and 12 th grades.
Anonymous wrote:Two different problems being discussed here.
1. Grammar and spelling. Assuming no learning disabilities, that can be refined by reading and by holding to standards. Spelling tests don't improve spelling, and neither does "studying" vocabulary if you don't study prefixes, suffixes, infixes, and roots. Having a kid read what they wrote out loud and summarize it, then fix it, also helps, but it has to be done repeatedly over a long time.
2. Argumentative writing, which is essentially what most academic writing is: using evidence to support theses and sub-points. That will not usually be picked up or refined by reading because most kids don't read that kind of writing outside of assignments. But argumentative writing can be taught as a series of formulas on which you improvise and create as you become more fluid at it, hence the 5P essay (which should, however, be a late-elementary into MS thing, not a HS one).
Reading does not convert into writing. Practice does.
Anonymous wrote:We have a DS in public and DD in private, and the difference in writing instruction is very noticeable. Private emphasizes grammar/sentence structure and has kids writing a lot, whereas there's been next to no instruction and very short writing assignments for DS. They are a grade apart, but if you compare writing samples, you'd guess they are three or more grades apart. You could argue that our DS is just not as good a writer as DD, and his poor writing is not due to a lack of instruction in MCPS, but both kids read a ton, and DS is a straight-A student. When I see what type of work receives an A for DS, it's honestly shocking.
FWIW I don't think this is just an MCPS issue. This is 2024 issue and fewer people are really teaching writing. It's frightening how many people don't understand the seriousness of that and are content to say "oh well, they will just use AI" or something similar.