Anonymous wrote:Either the reading department or AEI office essentially pushed the head of the ELC to retire. Our school will not provide ELC next year. It has already been phased out in 4th grade.
I loved the ELC program as a teacher (well... most parts of it). It was wonderful reading ACTUAL books and not snippets here and there. My biggest issue with Benchmark was that there was never any dedicated time to have novel studies. Haven't taught CKLA but i know there have been some serious concerns across the county with the rollout and implementation. I would bank on NOT having ELC at your home school if offered the CES spot. I would take it and if there's more information, change that decision later on. Teachers won't know until at least the end of the school year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are schools that literally never got ELC. Principal did not want it. We are supposed to trust teachers to differentiate in the classroom. I do not understand why MCPS is so bureaucratic and top down yet also allows so much autonomy for principals. It is like the worst of both worlds in some schools.
If everyone is in the same classroom like they have been since kindergarten, I would not hold my breath about differentiation happening. Will be honors for all.
Anonymous wrote:There are schools that literally never got ELC. Principal did not want it. We are supposed to trust teachers to differentiate in the classroom. I do not understand why MCPS is so bureaucratic and top down yet also allows so much autonomy for principals. It is like the worst of both worlds in some schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not think very many decisions about next year have been made yet. There is still so much shuffling and uncertainty in CO and staffing for school based has not been given to principals. It would be hard for any school team to plan much for next school year with so much uncertainty.
But how will families be able to make decisions about whether to accept CES spots if they don't know what their home school will be doing for enrichment? Obviously some would pick CES no matter what, but others would prefer to stay at the home school if they know the child will be in ELC but maybe not if they are just getting some occasional pullout time...
You should take the CES spot. ELC is good if it’s delivered with fidelity, but CES is still better. It wraps around to science and social studies. My middle schooler who did CES came in better prepared for those subjects in middle school compared to peers who did ELC and had spotty/limited coverage of those subjects in 4th and 5th. I am also reading between the MCPS lines and it’s obvious you are not going to be guaranteed ELC or cohorting or anything enriched or accelerated at the ES level. It seems like they are probably going to get rid of it, which is a huge shame.
Anonymous wrote:Just talked to our school. Title 1 (if that makes a difference). Said that MCPS paid a lot of money for CKLA and they will be doing that in place of ELC (but maybe with some ELC elements thrown in). Said that kids are grouped according to abilities, above grade level, grade level, below, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the PP. I spoke with a 4th grade teacher who is/was the ELA teacher. It sounded like it came from the principal (and maybe the principal got it from Central).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just talked to our school. Title 1 (if that makes a difference). Said that MCPS paid a lot of money for CKLA and they will be doing that in place of ELC (but maybe with some ELC elements thrown in). Said that kids are grouped according to abilities, above grade level, grade level, below, etc.
Could you tell if central office told them they had to stop offering ELC, or if they had the choice to keep ELC but chose not to? (Getting ready for my convo with our school and want to be prepared.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school based elc was a joke did they improve with yet another pilot?
Maybe at your school. I am happy with the ELC at my child’s school. Like the creativity, books, and teacher is wonderful.
What type of "creativity" was in your program?
My son went from hating writing to loving it. Especially likes creative writing.
To me, creative writing is the last thing that schools need to be doing when kids don't have basic writing, grammar, spelling, etc. Creative writing is easy to do at home (not to mention that they will be doing a lot of this in middle and high school English classes.)