Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to have “academic rigor” or differentiation when there are 27 kids to a class. Seems like class sizes increase every year at many catholic schools, especially St Marys.
Then they claim the ratio is 13:1 bc they have some random “floater” (who’s just a SAHM, not a teacher) there to hand out Kleenex.
My daughter's school caps classes at 26 per class, but for math and reading, the class is split in two or three groups. There are math and reading specialists on staff that teach these subjects to small groups. My daughter never had more than 12 students in her math or reading group...often less than 12.
? publics do the same thing, and often with smaller number of students per group, usually 6 to 8.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to have “academic rigor” or differentiation when there are 27 kids to a class. Seems like class sizes increase every year at many catholic schools, especially St Marys.
Then they claim the ratio is 13:1 bc they have some random “floater” (who’s just a SAHM, not a teacher) there to hand out Kleenex.
My daughter's school caps classes at 26 per class, but for math and reading, the class is split in two or three groups. There are math and reading specialists on staff that teach these subjects to small groups. My daughter never had more than 12 students in her math or reading group...often less than 12.
? publics do the same thing, and often with smaller number of students per group, usually 6 to 8.
Great. Relevance?
People claim that privates have smaller class sizes than public. Based on the ^^post, that doesn't appear to be the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to have “academic rigor” or differentiation when there are 27 kids to a class. Seems like class sizes increase every year at many catholic schools, especially St Marys.
Then they claim the ratio is 13:1 bc they have some random “floater” (who’s just a SAHM, not a teacher) there to hand out Kleenex.
My daughter's school caps classes at 26 per class, but for math and reading, the class is split in two or three groups. There are math and reading specialists on staff that teach these subjects to small groups. My daughter never had more than 12 students in her math or reading group...often less than 12.
? publics do the same thing, and often with smaller number of students per group, usually 6 to 8.
Great. Relevance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to have “academic rigor” or differentiation when there are 27 kids to a class. Seems like class sizes increase every year at many catholic schools, especially St Marys.
Then they claim the ratio is 13:1 bc they have some random “floater” (who’s just a SAHM, not a teacher) there to hand out Kleenex.
My daughter's school caps classes at 26 per class, but for math and reading, the class is split in two or three groups. There are math and reading specialists on staff that teach these subjects to small groups. My daughter never had more than 12 students in her math or reading group...often less than 12.
? publics do the same thing, and often with smaller number of students per group, usually 6 to 8.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to have “academic rigor” or differentiation when there are 27 kids to a class. Seems like class sizes increase every year at many catholic schools, especially St Marys.
Then they claim the ratio is 13:1 bc they have some random “floater” (who’s just a SAHM, not a teacher) there to hand out Kleenex.
My daughter's school caps classes at 26 per class, but for math and reading, the class is split in two or three groups. There are math and reading specialists on staff that teach these subjects to small groups. My daughter never had more than 12 students in her math or reading group...often less than 12.
Anonymous wrote:It’s also hard to have “academic rigor” or differentiation when they have half days every 2 weeks and some other BS “teacher work day” every other week. I haven’t seen any formal studies, but I know for a fact that kids are receiving WAY less actual instruction than they were 15-20 years ago.
And it’s sad that catholic schools seem to feel that they have to “match” the schedules of public schools just to “compete” for teachers. If catholic teachers want to leave and go work at a public (and get punched every few days), I say call their bluff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Folks, Ward 4 is the eastern portion of NW DC. The northern part of the ward contains Shepherd Park and Takoma, and the southern part of the ward is Petworth. Commuting to Gonzaga or The Heights would be bonkers. By distance they’re 8-10 miles away, but city traffic on surface streets moves around 10-12 mph, even outside of rush hour.
So then St. Peter until 5th and then St. Anselm's.
Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to have “academic rigor” or differentiation when there are 27 kids to a class. Seems like class sizes increase every year at many catholic schools, especially St Marys.
Then they claim the ratio is 13:1 bc they have some random “floater” (who’s just a SAHM, not a teacher) there to hand out Kleenex.
Anonymous wrote:Catholic schools and academic rigor?
Math and Science lol no
Anonymous wrote:Folks, Ward 4 is the eastern portion of NW DC. The northern part of the ward contains Shepherd Park and Takoma, and the southern part of the ward is Petworth. Commuting to Gonzaga or The Heights would be bonkers. By distance they’re 8-10 miles away, but city traffic on surface streets moves around 10-12 mph, even outside of rush hour.
Anonymous wrote:PPs comment fit Catholic schools of the 80s. Not the same today. It really depends on the school of the level of support that is needed.