Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For our HS - that the college counseling office will limit the number of colleges that you can apply to. That certain classes are restricted in class size because of "equipment" issues and your child won't get the electives they want because of that.
Aren't all classes restricted in size? No one would want a 40 person class. Kids aren't guaranteed their first choice electives anywhere.
You can EASILY go through these high schools having never received your top 3 choices for any English or History class. Then you're paying $56K for super specialized stuff that your particular kid doesn't care about: a year of Asian history or a year of Shakespeare. My history loving kid is having to take African American Culture as a history class (which I'm sure will be great but this kid would have killed for a spot in an actual history class).
African-American history is American history, so your kid is taking an actual history class.
Exactly. Thank you for calling this out
The class is African American culture. Not history but it's the only history class this kid will get for the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For our HS - that the college counseling office will limit the number of colleges that you can apply to. That certain classes are restricted in class size because of "equipment" issues and your child won't get the electives they want because of that.
Aren't all classes restricted in size? No one would want a 40 person class. Kids aren't guaranteed their first choice electives anywhere.
You can EASILY go through these high schools having never received your top 3 choices for any English or History class. Then you're paying $56K for super specialized stuff that your particular kid doesn't care about: a year of Asian history or a year of Shakespeare. My history loving kid is having to take African American Culture as a history class (which I'm sure will be great but this kid would have killed for a spot in an actual history class).
African-American history is American history, so your kid is taking an actual history class.
Exactly. Thank you for calling this out
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That behind the scenes, the Board was moving in the direction that it ultimately took and blindsided parents by firing (“not renewing”) several veteran and excellent white staffers who had been doing a great job. These people, ultimately about %20 of the staff were replaced by Black staff. Then the school went all equity and woke, all the time. The curriculum was overhauled and they began doing classroom exercises like the “oppressor / oppressed sorting game”. Shakespeare was no longer on the reading list for the specific grade where it had been for years.
This was years before George Floyd. The school was early to the DEI party and started paying outside contractors large sums to consult.
Lordy. What school is that?
Anonymous wrote:That behind the scenes, the Board was moving in the direction that it ultimately took and blindsided parents by firing (“not renewing”) several veteran and excellent white staffers who had been doing a great job. These people, ultimately about %20 of the staff were replaced by Black staff. Then the school went all equity and woke, all the time. The curriculum was overhauled and they began doing classroom exercises like the “oppressor / oppressed sorting game”. Shakespeare was no longer on the reading list for the specific grade where it had been for years.
This was years before George Floyd. The school was early to the DEI party and started paying outside contractors large sums to consult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For our HS - that the college counseling office will limit the number of colleges that you can apply to. That certain classes are restricted in class size because of "equipment" issues and your child won't get the electives they want because of that.
Aren't all classes restricted in size? No one would want a 40 person class. Kids aren't guaranteed their first choice electives anywhere.
You can EASILY go through these high schools having never received your top 3 choices for any English or History class. Then you're paying $56K for super specialized stuff that your particular kid doesn't care about: a year of Asian history or a year of Shakespeare. My history loving kid is having to take African American Culture as a history class (which I'm sure will be great but this kid would have killed for a spot in an actual history class).
African-American history is American history, so your kid is taking an actual history class.
Exactly. Thank you for calling this out
The class is African American culture. Not history but it's the only history class this kid will get for the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For our HS - that the college counseling office will limit the number of colleges that you can apply to. That certain classes are restricted in class size because of "equipment" issues and your child won't get the electives they want because of that.
Aren't all classes restricted in size? No one would want a 40 person class. Kids aren't guaranteed their first choice electives anywhere.
You can EASILY go through these high schools having never received your top 3 choices for any English or History class. Then you're paying $56K for super specialized stuff that your particular kid doesn't care about: a year of Asian history or a year of Shakespeare. My history loving kid is having to take African American Culture as a history class (which I'm sure will be great but this kid would have killed for a spot in an actual history class).
African-American history is American history, so your kid is taking an actual history class.
Exactly. Thank you for calling this out
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will go first. Would have loved to know that:
1) School does not allow students to take home their graded quizzes and exams. Student may only review them in class.
2) School does not allow students to view their grades at anytime. Grades are open and viewable for a couple of days per month and even viewable for less time for parents.
3). You get ONE grade for each class at the end of the year.
We would have still enrolled but these were interesting aspects that we were not aware of prior to enrollment. And, my DD loved it.
As a parent who tutors her child in one subject, the first one really makes me mad. What is the reason? Teachers don't want to come up with new tests each year?
Anonymous wrote:At Madeira, students take seven intensive five-week modules or "mods" instead of two semesters or three trimesters. A full year of a subject is made up of three mods. I assumed that my child would have the same teacher for the three mods in a particular subject. For example, I assumed that she would have the same history teacher for her three mods of history. Nope. She had three different history teachers. It's hit or miss. Sometimes you get repeats, sometimes you don't. It's a question I didn't think to ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will go first. Would have loved to know that:
1) School does not allow students to take home their graded quizzes and exams. Student may only review them in class.
2) School does not allow students to view their grades at anytime. Grades are open and viewable for a couple of days per month and even viewable for less time for parents.
3). You get ONE grade for each class at the end of the year.
We would have still enrolled but these were interesting aspects that we were not aware of prior to enrollment. And, my DD loved it.
As a parent who tutors her child in one subject, the first one really makes me mad. What is the reason? Teachers don't want to come up with new tests each year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For our HS - that the college counseling office will limit the number of colleges that you can apply to. That certain classes are restricted in class size because of "equipment" issues and your child won't get the electives they want because of that.
Aren't all classes restricted in size? No one would want a 40 person class. Kids aren't guaranteed their first choice electives anywhere.
You can EASILY go through these high schools having never received your top 3 choices for any English or History class. Then you're paying $56K for super specialized stuff that your particular kid doesn't care about: a year of Asian history or a year of Shakespeare. My history loving kid is having to take African American Culture as a history class (which I'm sure will be great but this kid would have killed for a spot in an actual history class).
African-American history is American history, so your kid is taking an actual history class.