Anonymous wrote:As another parent who couldn't afford private, we entered the language immersion lottery to get our bright child more stimulation in early ES, before AAP began. Thankfully we got a spot and both our kids benefited from that program.
Anonymous wrote:oh my. I was under the impression that schools utilized a resource teacher (acronym ART I think?) to administer more advanced work in a part time setting to students.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that’s very impressive! I thought FCPS had AAP to offer more challenges in-class for those who qualify from k-2.Anonymous wrote:I would keep her in a good Montessori if you could. We moved DD from Montessori to FCPS in first grade. She did great in school, but would come home distraught that she was not learning anything. To show her teacher that she could do more than add two and two and come up with four, she would show that she could do 2 x 2 and get four, or 8/2 to get 4 or 16 different ways to do it, but her teacher did not acknowledge what she was trying to do (not that I blame the teacher; there were kids in class that did not recognize numbers or letters or knew the names of shapes or colors).
She successfully lobbied to go back to Montessori ("My brain is rusting when I am in school. Why am I going there?") half way through the school year, and she stayed there until she got into AAP in 3rd grade. Her first assignment when she got back to Montessori was to write a research paper on a dinosaur, to go with a diorama.
DP. Not really. Both my kids qualified for AAP work in K-2 but only one teacher actually challenged my kids. The other teachers didn’t provide any challenging work. I assume they didn’t have time to differentiate for the higher level learners.
oh my. I was under the impression that schools utilized a resource teacher (acronym ART I think?) to administer more advanced work in a part time setting to students.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that’s very impressive! I thought FCPS had AAP to offer more challenges in-class for those who qualify from k-2.Anonymous wrote:I would keep her in a good Montessori if you could. We moved DD from Montessori to FCPS in first grade. She did great in school, but would come home distraught that she was not learning anything. To show her teacher that she could do more than add two and two and come up with four, she would show that she could do 2 x 2 and get four, or 8/2 to get 4 or 16 different ways to do it, but her teacher did not acknowledge what she was trying to do (not that I blame the teacher; there were kids in class that did not recognize numbers or letters or knew the names of shapes or colors).
She successfully lobbied to go back to Montessori ("My brain is rusting when I am in school. Why am I going there?") half way through the school year, and she stayed there until she got into AAP in 3rd grade. Her first assignment when she got back to Montessori was to write a research paper on a dinosaur, to go with a diorama.
DP. Not really. Both my kids qualified for AAP work in K-2 but only one teacher actually challenged my kids. The other teachers didn’t provide any challenging work. I assume they didn’t have time to differentiate for the higher level learners.
Anonymous wrote:I would keep her in a good Montessori if you could. We moved DD from Montessori to FCPS in first grade. She did great in school, but would come home distraught that she was not learning anything. To show her teacher that she could do more than add two and two and come up with four, she would show that she could do 2 x 2 and get four, or 8/2 to get 4 or 16 different ways to do it, but her teacher did not acknowledge what she was trying to do (not that I blame the teacher; there were kids in class that did not recognize numbers or letters or knew the names of shapes or colors).
She successfully lobbied to go back to Montessori ("My brain is rusting when I am in school. Why am I going there?") half way through the school year, and she stayed there until she got into AAP in 3rd grade. Her first assignment when she got back to Montessori was to write a research paper on a dinosaur, to go with a diorama.
Anonymous wrote:that’s very impressive! I thought FCPS had AAP to offer more challenges in-class for those who qualify from k-2.Anonymous wrote:I would keep her in a good Montessori if you could. We moved DD from Montessori to FCPS in first grade. She did great in school, but would come home distraught that she was not learning anything. To show her teacher that she could do more than add two and two and come up with four, she would show that she could do 2 x 2 and get four, or 8/2 to get 4 or 16 different ways to do it, but her teacher did not acknowledge what she was trying to do (not that I blame the teacher; there were kids in class that did not recognize numbers or letters or knew the names of shapes or colors).
She successfully lobbied to go back to Montessori ("My brain is rusting when I am in school. Why am I going there?") half way through the school year, and she stayed there until she got into AAP in 3rd grade. Her first assignment when she got back to Montessori was to write a research paper on a dinosaur, to go with a diorama.
Anonymous wrote:Montessori K was the best possible thing I could have done for my son. That year gained him so much confidence and independence. I love montessori as a whole, but the third year in the cycle was wonderful. Mornings were whole group, but afternoon was just K, so it was a very small group with the teacher and he was able to just fly.
The downside was that 1st and 2nd were all review. I wish we'd had the money to continue Montessori through elementary school, or at least until AAP started.
Anonymous wrote:If it's a true Montessori model at the daycare they would benefit from completing the third year of the cycle in kindergarten. If not, switch to public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WWYD: we are not in our forever home and want our next house to be our long term home. Our problem is we don’t think we can get our house ready to sell this spring/summer and our eldest starts K this fall. The eldest is currently in a Montessori daycare (that we no longer like) with their youngest sibling. Would you a) find a new Montessori daycare and have eldest complete K there, or b) send eldest to public K and change schools when we move next year?
If I could do it again my kids would go to private schools. FCPS seems to get messier every year and most parents I know have tutors. My kids are older and don't want to leave friends/sports but if they were younger we would pull them out.
FWIW we did private for K-2 and were equally displeased. I think we threw away nearly $100k and didn't get anything we couldn't have gotten in public, except less screen time. We moved back to FCPS for 3rd.
I do think benchmark has kind of ruined upper elementary language arts, as there are no more book clubs/novel groups, it's all just paragraphs from a textbook which has killed my child's love of reading...but I'm not sure it would be different in private school, we didn't make it that far.
In private, your kid would be reading whole books since first grade
He didn't in 1st or 2nd, that's part of why we pulled him back to public. In 3rd-5th there were lots of novels and book clubs, but in 6th this year it's been only benchmark.
ok, that sounds absurd! What a broken system public education isAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:can you explain more about benchmark and how it’s ruined language arts and your child’s love of reading?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WWYD: we are not in our forever home and want our next house to be our long term home. Our problem is we don’t think we can get our house ready to sell this spring/summer and our eldest starts K this fall. The eldest is currently in a Montessori daycare (that we no longer like) with their youngest sibling. Would you a) find a new Montessori daycare and have eldest complete K there, or b) send eldest to public K and change schools when we move next year?
If I could do it again my kids would go to private schools. FCPS seems to get messier every year and most parents I know have tutors. My kids are older and don't want to leave friends/sports but if they were younger we would pull them out.
FWIW we did private for K-2 and were equally displeased. I think we threw away nearly $100k and didn't get anything we couldn't have gotten in public, except less screen time. We moved back to FCPS for 3rd.
I do think benchmark has kind of ruined upper elementary language arts, as there are no more book clubs/novel groups, it's all just paragraphs from a textbook which has killed my child's love of reading...but I'm not sure it would be different in private school, we didn't make it that far.
Benchmark is like an old school textbook with tons of excerpts but no full stories. They read 3 paragraphs about person A and a poem about person B and then have to write a comparison essay. Or they read an excerpt from book A and an excerpt from book B and have to explain how the characters show xyz trait. The teacher has been trying to give them summaries of the books to give them more background info, but DS is just frustrated that they don't get to read a whole book and are writing full 5 paragraph essays based on a grand total of 5 paragraphs of source text.
that’s very impressive! I thought FCPS had AAP to offer more challenges in-class for those who qualify from k-2.Anonymous wrote:I would keep her in a good Montessori if you could. We moved DD from Montessori to FCPS in first grade. She did great in school, but would come home distraught that she was not learning anything. To show her teacher that she could do more than add two and two and come up with four, she would show that she could do 2 x 2 and get four, or 8/2 to get 4 or 16 different ways to do it, but her teacher did not acknowledge what she was trying to do (not that I blame the teacher; there were kids in class that did not recognize numbers or letters or knew the names of shapes or colors).
She successfully lobbied to go back to Montessori ("My brain is rusting when I am in school. Why am I going there?") half way through the school year, and she stayed there until she got into AAP in 3rd grade. Her first assignment when she got back to Montessori was to write a research paper on a dinosaur, to go with a diorama.
Anonymous wrote:can you explain more about benchmark and how it’s ruined language arts and your child’s love of reading?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WWYD: we are not in our forever home and want our next house to be our long term home. Our problem is we don’t think we can get our house ready to sell this spring/summer and our eldest starts K this fall. The eldest is currently in a Montessori daycare (that we no longer like) with their youngest sibling. Would you a) find a new Montessori daycare and have eldest complete K there, or b) send eldest to public K and change schools when we move next year?
If I could do it again my kids would go to private schools. FCPS seems to get messier every year and most parents I know have tutors. My kids are older and don't want to leave friends/sports but if they were younger we would pull them out.
FWIW we did private for K-2 and were equally displeased. I think we threw away nearly $100k and didn't get anything we couldn't have gotten in public, except less screen time. We moved back to FCPS for 3rd.
I do think benchmark has kind of ruined upper elementary language arts, as there are no more book clubs/novel groups, it's all just paragraphs from a textbook which has killed my child's love of reading...but I'm not sure it would be different in private school, we didn't make it that far.