Anonymous wrote:What I’m still not getting from responders is WHY Central Office is dramatically larger than comparable districts. I’m not against any explanation, or the existence of centralized functions but I don’t get the why. I’m not surprised that the staff care about children. Or have specific jobs. BUT What requirements are they meeting with the staff they have differently from other districts and what are the justifications?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The new Amplify curriculum central office wants to role out in science is terrible. It has dozens of factual errors and awful graphics. A human heart in the anatomy unit is just shown as a box. The definition of bacteria is wrong. Can we cut the thousands some fool spent on it?
Almost all of the home grown curricula are bad and substantially worse than what DCPS could buy off the shelf for much less money. Why would a single city even want to develop its own math or science curriculum? I understand pieces of social studies, in order to emphasize local history and likely government given the unique DC context... and maybe some of ELA to emphasize local writers, local culture, etc, but neither of those require entirely new curricula and neither of those have anything to do with math or science. It's insane how much money DCPS wastes on developing its own stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More money for actual instruction. Why do we have central office when my kid hasn ‘t had a science teacher all year?
Your kid hasn’t had a teacher because being a teacher is ridiculously hard and almost no one wants to do it. Not having a central office team doesn’t change that.
Being a teacher is a lot less hard in a classroom of 22 students than in a classroom of 28 students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More money for actual instruction. Why do we have central office when my kid hasn ‘t had a science teacher all year?
Your kid hasn’t had a teacher because being a teacher is ridiculously hard and almost no one wants to do it. Not having a central office team doesn’t change that.
Anonymous wrote:More money for actual instruction. Why do we have central office when my kid hasn ‘t had a science teacher all year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The new Amplify curriculum central office wants to role out in science is terrible. It has dozens of factual errors and awful graphics. A human heart in the anatomy unit is just shown as a box. The definition of bacteria is wrong. Can we cut the thousands some fool spent on it?
Almost all of the home grown curricula are bad and substantially worse than what DCPS could buy off the shelf for much less money. Why would a single city even want to develop its own math or science curriculum? I understand pieces of social studies, in order to emphasize local history and likely government given the unique DC context... and maybe some of ELA to emphasize local writers, local culture, etc, but neither of those require entirely new curricula and neither of those have anything to do with math or science. It's insane how much money DCPS wastes on developing its own stuff.
The irony here with this comment and sentiment is that these "home grown" curricula you're referring to from the central office are made by teachers that are hired and paid admin premium to write it. You know...teachers that are so universally competent and efficient that they don't need a central office beyond maybe a skeleton crew ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The new Amplify curriculum central office wants to role out in science is terrible. It has dozens of factual errors and awful graphics. A human heart in the anatomy unit is just shown as a box. The definition of bacteria is wrong. Can we cut the thousands some fool spent on it?
Almost all of the home grown curricula are bad and substantially worse than what DCPS could buy off the shelf for much less money. Why would a single city even want to develop its own math or science curriculum? I understand pieces of social studies, in order to emphasize local history and likely government given the unique DC context... and maybe some of ELA to emphasize local writers, local culture, etc, but neither of those require entirely new curricula and neither of those have anything to do with math or science. It's insane how much money DCPS wastes on developing its own stuff.
Anonymous wrote:The entire Early Childhood Division should be cut. They make all of the teachers at my school participate in mandatory coaching sessions every week. I’m so sick of them being in my classroom trying to tell me what to do.
Anonymous wrote:The new Amplify curriculum central office wants to role out in science is terrible. It has dozens of factual errors and awful graphics. A human heart in the anatomy unit is just shown as a box. The definition of bacteria is wrong. Can we cut the thousands some fool spent on it?