Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
That's strange. I feel my kids are getting a much better education than I did at a W 30 years ago before attending an ivy.
You either have a bad memory or aren't very familiar with what's going on in the classroom now.
NP here, I disagree with you. I don’t feel my children have received a sub par education. You may be able to find a district with similar stats (ESOL, FARMS, etc) that has done better but MCPS overall prepares students quite well. What experiences and data do you have to support such statements?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
All the evidence suggests otherwise. When I was in MCPS 30 years ago the average SAT score was maybe 1000. Today it's more like 1400. It's pretty clear this dramatic increase in these standardized test scores is because the high-quality of education is just getting better and better with each year.
Stop contradicting our narrative about failing schools with facts!!
These tests have been revised several times since then. Its not the same test and the same scale for the past 30 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
That's strange. I feel my kids are getting a much better education than I did at a W 30 years ago before attending an ivy.
You either have a bad memory or aren't very familiar with what's going on in the classroom now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My first grader gets targeted intervention in school, every first and second grader us getting either targeted enrichment or interventions. Her reading is a bit behind (I think she's a level 6?) But her math and writing are very strong. One of her Christmas presents to her teacher was writing a letter to her teacher explaining why she liked her so much.
My first grader is maybe reading at 10 which is likely much lower than they'd be if there hadn't been DL. I'm no reading teacher, but I also tried to work them for 30 minutes a day throughout the pandemic and over the summer.
That's called parenting which is something you should be doing with your child all of the time. Who are the students who are behind? Mostly ones with checked-out parents.
That's my take as well. All the parents complaining about gaps are the same ones who did nothing but complain during DL and never did anything for their kids.
You are so out of line. I have an upper elem student with learning disabilities. I was working remotely so I greatly reduced my work hours and worked early am and late at night so I could be very involved in my DC’s virtual learning experience. Guess what, kids don’t always work as well with their parents as they do with teachers and therapists. And as I posted upthread we are paying for tutors. I did everything I could short of quitting my job to homeschool which would have been financially impossible. Stop with this rude and unfair “sorry you were forced to parent your kids” nonsense. MCPS apologist or just a total jerk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My first grader gets targeted intervention in school, every first and second grader us getting either targeted enrichment or interventions. Her reading is a bit behind (I think she's a level 6?) But her math and writing are very strong. One of her Christmas presents to her teacher was writing a letter to her teacher explaining why she liked her so much.
My first grader is maybe reading at 10 which is likely much lower than they'd be if there hadn't been DL. I'm no reading teacher, but I also tried to work them for 30 minutes a day throughout the pandemic and over the summer.
That's called parenting which is something you should be doing with your child all of the time. Who are the students who are behind? Mostly ones with checked-out parents.
That's my take as well. All the parents complaining about gaps are the same ones who did nothing but complain during DL and never did anything for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My first grader gets targeted intervention in school, every first and second grader us getting either targeted enrichment or interventions. Her reading is a bit behind (I think she's a level 6?) But her math and writing are very strong. One of her Christmas presents to her teacher was writing a letter to her teacher explaining why she liked her so much.
My first grader is maybe reading at 10 which is likely much lower than they'd be if there hadn't been DL. I'm no reading teacher, but I also tried to work them for 30 minutes a day throughout the pandemic and over the summer.
That's called parenting which is something you should be doing with your child all of the time. Who are the students who are behind? Mostly ones with checked-out parents.
That's my take as well. All the parents complaining about gaps are the same ones who did nothing but complain during DL and never did anything for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do need a private tutor. The schools are not addressing these gaps in any practical ways. They talk about them and then that stops and nothing happens. It's a disaster for many.
This is insane. I was wondering last year how they were going to remediate deficits. It never occurred to me that they would just blow off the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
All the evidence suggests otherwise. When I was in MCPS 30 years ago the average SAT score was maybe 1000. Today it's more like 1400. It's pretty clear this dramatic increase in these standardized test scores is because the high-quality of education is just getting better and better with each year.
Stop contradicting our narrative about failing schools with facts!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
All the evidence suggests otherwise. When I was in MCPS 30 years ago the average SAT score was maybe 1000. Today it's more like 1400. It's pretty clear this dramatic increase in these standardized test scores is because the high-quality of education is just getting better and better with each year.
Anonymous wrote:You do need a private tutor. The schools are not addressing these gaps in any practical ways. They talk about them and then that stops and nothing happens. It's a disaster for many.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
All the evidence suggests otherwise. When I was in MCPS 30 years ago the average SAT score was maybe 1000. Today it's more like 1400. It's pretty clear this dramatic increase in these standardized test scores is because the high-quality of education is just getting better and better with each year.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS has been "assessing" whether my DC qualifies for compensatory services to make up for the lapse in services over the last 2 years. DC clearly did not have the IEP implemented correctly for the last 2 years. Yet its been another entire semester of this "assessing" and nothing has happened. We are paying for one-on-one tutors to bridge the gap but honestly, we can't afford it, and we can't keep it up forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
That's strange. I feel my kids are getting a much better education than I did at a W 30 years ago before attending an ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a tutor or Saturday school.
Nope, the school has an obligation to address these gaps.
You should’ve learned that public education in this country is a joke. We all saw that last year with online learning. Get your kid a tutor.
Public education here is excellent, but there are many hyper-privileged types that expect the county to raise their kids for them.
LMAO. Excellent? Not by a long shot. Especially not in MoCo. We do have some excellent teachers. But the school system as a whole is pretty subpar.
All the evidence suggests otherwise. When I was in MCPS 30 years ago the average SAT score was maybe 1000. Today it's more like 1400. It's pretty clear this dramatic increase in these standardized test scores is because the high-quality of education is just getting better and better with each year.