Anonymous wrote:The answer to this question depends on which school you belong to.
My rough math says about 60-70 percent of MCPS schools are good or even great.
But 30-40 percent are mediocre or bad.
So the only to know if you should be worried is if you tell us which schools you’re targeting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents with kids in MCPS “have to” say they are happy. Because it was their decision to send their kids there. They want to validate their decision was the right one.
To the extent this is true (and I don’t think it’s mostly true) the same is true for any parent or any school.
Anyway OP I had issues with MCPS but I realized that I would have issues with any school. The perfect school doesn’t exist in reality. In the end I feel really lucky my kid got a good education (even if it could have been better in some ways probably).
Anonymous wrote:I am an avid reader of this forum as I try to figure out where to send our kids to school for kindergarten.
But reading these threads are really starting to seriously worry me.
Our neighborhood is about 50/50 public private. Nearly all the public parents are happy with their kids’ ES and HS experiences (mixed on MS), and all the private parents are happy with their kids’ schools, too.
Are the public school parents in my neighborhood just settling, or is this forum wildly anti-public school and not reflective of how most people feel about MCPS?
Anonymous wrote:Education everywhere, nationwide, is a disaster. Teachers are leaving in droves, new teachers usually burn out in less than 5 years. There aren't enough new teachers to replace them, because, who in there right mind would become a teacher?
Special Ed is in worse shape than Gen Ed, because it's a much harder job than the already hard job of a gen ed teacher. Not only is the job physically harder, there's a lot more paperwork and meetings (A LOT more).
ES is usually fine - warm fuzzy, and you have small issues that a counselor can usually resolve. Sometimes bigger problems emerge, if you have a good administration, it'll get worked out
MS is awful everywhere. Hormones raging, lousy curriculum, kids are mean (especially girls)
HS - depends on the school (administration and teachers), your kid, and, more importantly their peers. Your kid could rise to the top, become involved with drugs and drop out of life, or float along fine, oblivious to all the nonsense around them. The new changes proposed, if passed, could mix things up a bit for 27-28 and 28-29, but then things will settle, people will move, and the new programs will thrive or die
The reality is that MCPS has gone downhill in the 25 years we've lived here (since Jerry Weast left, and I know some hated him, but test scores were better and he didn't put up with nonsense). And/but, the demographics, and I'm referring to income levels, not race, have changed in the county since he left, and incomes for the vast majority, have not gone up
In the schools, there are no consequences for kids these days, and they know it at all ages. You can sell drugs in HS and have the police come in and arrest you, and be back the next day, selling more drugs. A MS kid can tell his teacher to Eff Off, they get sent to the office and are back in the classroom the next day. In ES, they are learning they can get away with whatever they want.
Between the covid kids and SM/internet, kids have no attention span, can't read a book (too long), can't do basic math, and cannot pay attention to a teacher for a 45 minute lesson plan to learn anything (too long for them to pay attention, teachers don't blast music or change colors or switch images).
Our future does not look good
Anonymous wrote:Most parents with kids in MCPS “have to” say they are happy. Because it was their decision to send their kids there. They want to validate their decision was the right one.
Anonymous wrote:As a teacher and a parent of two in MCPS, I am generally happy with MCPS. I do think we provided a better product 20 years ago, but I'd say that's a national trend rather than a local. I do believe there is some correction going on that's going to take time to shake out. Someone mentioned how many parents are happy with their teachers, but would like to see more educational rigor and accountability for their children. I'd say that's accurate for the teachers too. But there are a lot of policies put in place over the last decade that have to be undone. Still, my experience is that there are good teachers teaching good students.
Of course, the biggest factor to your child's education success is you. Keeping them exposed to reading, music, physical activity, and limiting their use of screens (especially at an early age) is going to do so much more for their educational outcomes than any policy from central office.
Anonymous wrote:yes, we have been happy with WJ. Teachers have been mostly fantastic.
Anonymous wrote:Mostly happy, yes. I am not convinced private is that much better