Anonymous wrote:Any other insights on the aftercare programs? It looks like at Langley JK is not full day so it's 2 aftercare programs if you are dual working parents Flint Hill is full day JK so just the normal aftercare program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are truly posting w/o your permission that is a huge deal and a red flag. Double check you didn’t sign something g accidentally, or request in writing that your child’s image not be posted publicly and revoke any previous permissions. I’ve never seen a school not take that seriously, so if Green Hedges really is doing that, it’s a problem.
PP referenced Nysmith, in which case you did sign a waiver re: photos (its in the enrollment info)....
Anonymous wrote:Any other insights on the aftercare programs? It looks like at Langley JK is not full day so it's 2 aftercare programs if you are dual working parents Flint Hill is full day JK so just the normal aftercare program.
Anonymous wrote:Langley uses the widely discredited Lucy Calkins’ Readers Workshop to teach reading. It is a kind of Balanced Literacy/Whole Language method. Some kids will learn anyway, but many will struggle. See older threads on that method in the Education General forum for more.
What does FH use to teach reading ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Langley uses the widely discredited Lucy Calkins’ Readers Workshop to teach reading. It is a kind of Balanced Literacy/Whole Language method. Some kids will learn anyway, but many will struggle. See older threads on that method in the Education General forum for more.
What does FH use to teach reading ?
LOL--I promise you, everybody at either school will learn to read. The biggest determining factor of reading proficiency in my experience is students being read to/practicing reading outside of school--the specific reading curriculum really doesn't make a huge difference.
OP, I'd pick the school where your child and family felt most comfortable. Both are great schools--you really can't go wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Langley uses the widely discredited Lucy Calkins’ Readers Workshop to teach reading. It is a kind of Balanced Literacy/Whole Language method. Some kids will learn anyway, but many will struggle. See older threads on that method in the Education General forum for more.
What does FH use to teach reading ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Langley uses the widely discredited Lucy Calkins’ Readers Workshop to teach reading. It is a kind of Balanced Literacy/Whole Language method. Some kids will learn anyway, but many will struggle. See older threads on that method in the Education General forum for more.
What does FH use to teach reading ?
Langley is heavy into phonics as well.
Balanced Literacy says it “includes Phonics” but is not Phonics-centric. The Lucy Calkins curriculum teaches 3-queung (e.g., guessing using the pictures), which always is a bad method. We saw the 3-queuing method being taught, and written on the whiteboard, when we toured.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Langley uses the widely discredited Lucy Calkins’ Readers Workshop to teach reading. It is a kind of Balanced Literacy/Whole Language method. Some kids will learn anyway, but many will struggle. See older threads on that method in the Education General forum for more.
What does FH use to teach reading ?
Langley is heavy into phonics as well.
Anonymous wrote:Langley uses the widely discredited Lucy Calkins’ Readers Workshop to teach reading. It is a kind of Balanced Literacy/Whole Language method. Some kids will learn anyway, but many will struggle. See older threads on that method in the Education General forum for more.
What does FH use to teach reading ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, what exactly do you mean about Nysmith and classroom / home connection?
Did this get answered? I”m curious what it means since we are also considering.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what exactly do you mean about Nysmith and classroom / home connection?