Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because there is so much more to do being 5 besides learning alphabet and reading. Also some kids start school in their very early 5.
It’s fine if they did it themselves, but to prepare them for K purposely..
Like what? It’s not kids who learn to read at 4/5 are not also doing art, playing outside, learning sports, etc etc.
Anonymous wrote:Because there is so much more to do being 5 besides learning alphabet and reading. Also some kids start school in their very early 5.
It’s fine if they did it themselves, but to prepare them for K purposely..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in a different public school district. Our kindergarten class has a maximum of 15 kids, and each teacher has a TA to help. Twenty-eight kids in kindergarten would be challenging because their needs at that age are so different. The top 25% are reading up to chapter books, and the bottom 25% don't know all their letters yet.
Trying to understand, why a kindergartner should read before starting school? What school is for at 5 years old?
Anonymous wrote:I'm in a different public school district. Our kindergarten class has a maximum of 15 kids, and each teacher has a TA to help. Twenty-eight kids in kindergarten would be challenging because their needs at that age are so different. The top 25% are reading up to chapter books, and the bottom 25% don't know all their letters yet.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in a different public school district. Our kindergarten class has a maximum of 15 kids, and each teacher has a TA to help. Twenty-eight kids in kindergarten would be challenging because their needs at that age are so different. The top 25% are reading up to chapter books, and the bottom 25% don't know all their letters yet.
Anonymous wrote:For a wealthy school it’s a bit high but not by much. We prefer small classes for our kids, so we chose a focus school. 16 kids in kinder and no more than 18 in first and second grades (and that’s after the class size expansion this year). It never made sense to me to pay an extra $100k to live in Bethesda to have huge classes.
Anonymous wrote:How does one start volunteering at MCPS? I have Master's in Education from a European country, can I volunteer in order to get teaching experience?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a wealthy school it’s a bit high but not by much. We prefer small classes for our kids, so we chose a focus school. 16 kids in kinder and no more than 18 in first and second grades (and that’s after the class size expansion this year). It never made sense to me to pay an extra $100k to live in Bethesda to have huge classes.
Only 100k? If most of the kids are at the same level and they do breakout groups for reading it can work. If there is a wide spectrum of abilities and a couple problem kids even 16 can be too many. That said K kids are more alike than different no matter the SES. Differences really start manifesting about 3rd grade, by middle school it’s quite apparent the differences.
Anonymous wrote:For a wealthy school it’s a bit high but not by much. We prefer small classes for our kids, so we chose a focus school. 16 kids in kinder and no more than 18 in first and second grades (and that’s after the class size expansion this year). It never made sense to me to pay an extra $100k to live in Bethesda to have huge classes.
Anonymous wrote:There is a teacher shortage, and that’s a huge issue. I’d be grateful your kid has an actual teacher. My child has never had a permanent teacher this year because the school can’t find one. Her class is small, but will now be staffed by a long term sub who never stepped foot in a classroom before. That is worse to me than 28 kids in a class. I’d much prefer my daughter be in your child’s situation.