Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately it seems like admin only cars about data, not actual education any more. We had a C average for the whole high school last quarter. Kids often care and honestly often don’t have a reason to. There is no attendance policy now. If a kid passes one quarter they can basically fail the next one and still pass a class. There are no consequences natural or otherwise. It is disheartening seeing a kid put effort to get an A or B and then completely slack off the next quarter.
Anonymous wrote:Our principal is wonderful but he has a boss too and can't just cancel everything because we are stressed. The hardest part right now is the student behavior. My friends think I'm joking when I tell them what elementary kids are doing in classes with no repercussions. We have kids cussing out their teachers, running at full speed around the building, climbing on top of cabinets and just punching the crap out of each other for no reason. These aren't even students with services. These are kids who have experienced a tremendous amount of trauma during COVID and lack any self-regulation strategies. To my admin's credit, they do come when we call them but they can't really do anything. Nobody has been suspended this year because that's a big no-no in schools these days as we don't want to "perpetuate the school to prison pipeline". Parents are either unresponsive or at a loss too. Since I know DCUM is crawling with advocates, YES we are trying to collect data and do FBAs, etc. but this used to be one or two kids a year in the entire building. Not a few in each class across the building. We aren't even fully staffed anymore due to resignations. It would be great to wave a magic wand and have staff appear but no such luck. We've been approved for critical staffing to provide 1:1 support for one student but nobody is applying for the position. So right now, all non-classroom staff can't do their jobs because they are either covering lunch/recess, subbing for classes (there aren't subs), helping deal with behavior issues, or serving as the 1:1
I'm so sick of it. We can't get through lessons when a few kids in each class are just occupying 99% of our time and energy. I feel terrible for our kids who desperately want and need to learn. It doesn't help that we're trying to pretend that the pandemic didn't happen and we're still trying to teach grade-level content to students who lost so much time.
MCPS is losing a lot of staff. Higher ups in central are catching on that the grass IS greener in other districts.
Anonymous wrote:Our principal is wonderful but he has a boss too and can't just cancel everything because we are stressed. The hardest part right now is the student behavior. My friends think I'm joking when I tell them what elementary kids are doing in classes with no repercussions. We have kids cussing out their teachers, running at full speed around the building, climbing on top of cabinets and just punching the crap out of each other for no reason. These aren't even students with services. These are kids who have experienced a tremendous amount of trauma during COVID and lack any self-regulation strategies. To my admin's credit, they do come when we call them but they can't really do anything. Nobody has been suspended this year because that's a big no-no in schools these days as we don't want to "perpetuate the school to prison pipeline". Parents are either unresponsive or at a loss too. Since I know DCUM is crawling with advocates, YES we are trying to collect data and do FBAs, etc. but this used to be one or two kids a year in the entire building. Not a few in each class across the building. We aren't even fully staffed anymore due to resignations. It would be great to wave a magic wand and have staff appear but no such luck. We've been approved for critical staffing to provide 1:1 support for one student but nobody is applying for the position. So right now, all non-classroom staff can't do their jobs because they are either covering lunch/recess, subbing for classes (there aren't subs), helping deal with behavior issues, or serving as the 1:1
I'm so sick of it. We can't get through lessons when a few kids in each class are just occupying 99% of our time and energy. I feel terrible for our kids who desperately want and need to learn. It doesn't help that we're trying to pretend that the pandemic didn't happen and we're still trying to teach grade-level content to students who lost so much time.
MCPS is losing a lot of staff. Higher ups in central are catching on that the grass IS greener in other districts.
Anonymous wrote:Our principal is wonderful but he has a boss too and can't just cancel everything because we are stressed. The hardest part right now is the student behavior. My friends think I'm joking when I tell them what elementary kids are doing in classes with no repercussions. We have kids cussing out their teachers, running at full speed around the building, climbing on top of cabinets and just punching the crap out of each other for no reason. These aren't even students with services. These are kids who have experienced a tremendous amount of trauma during COVID and lack any self-regulation strategies. To my admin's credit, they do come when we call them but they can't really do anything. Nobody has been suspended this year because that's a big no-no in schools these days as we don't want to "perpetuate the school to prison pipeline". Parents are either unresponsive or at a loss too. Since I know DCUM is crawling with advocates, YES we are trying to collect data and do FBAs, etc. but this used to be one or two kids a year in the entire building. Not a few in each class across the building. We aren't even fully staffed anymore due to resignations. It would be great to wave a magic wand and have staff appear but no such luck. We've been approved for critical staffing to provide 1:1 support for one student but nobody is applying for the position. So right now, all non-classroom staff can't do their jobs because they are either covering lunch/recess, subbing for classes (there aren't subs), helping deal with behavior issues, or serving as the 1:1
I'm so sick of it. We can't get through lessons when a few kids in each class are just occupying 99% of our time and energy. I feel terrible for our kids who desperately want and need to learn. It doesn't help that we're trying to pretend that the pandemic didn't happen and we're still trying to teach grade-level content to students who lost so much time.
MCPS is losing a lot of staff. Higher ups in central are catching on that the grass IS greener in other districts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it the post-pandemic push to increase test scores and academic achievement?
NO. Partly, but also the students are out of control and rather than crack down on bad choices by students and permissive parenting, admin would rather attack teachers. My principal ignored the numerous groups of seventh and eighth graders roaming the hallways to yell at the teacher of a group of sixth graders working on a group project in hallway because they were lying on the floor to make their poster. That teacher is considering a transfer.
Anonymous wrote:Is it the post-pandemic push to increase test scores and academic achievement?