Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Porter is in over her head, but I wonder if Taylor is getting the message that the BOE may not be on board with this chaos and MCPS' junk surveys.
Who is Porter? Isn't Niki Hazel Chief Academic Officer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Porter is in over her head, but I wonder if Taylor is getting the message that the BOE may not be on board with this chaos and MCPS' junk surveys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
I'm curious, do folks have a sense of if it's her or Taylor driving the bus on the program analysis? Clearly they are both on board but I wonder who is really driving it.
Taylor is definitely driving the bus. In fact, he seems to be sitting quite comfortably on his throne.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Porter is in over her head, but I wonder if Taylor is getting the message that the BOE may not be on board with this chaos and MCPS' junk surveys.
I wonder if Taylor is scared of the BOE. He seems to move as though he knows he can get them to do whatever he wants them to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Porter is in over her head, but I wonder if Taylor is getting the message that the BOE may not be on board with this chaos and MCPS' junk surveys.
I wonder if Taylor is scared of the BOE. He seems to move as though he knows he can get them to do whatever he wants them to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Porter is in over her head, but I wonder if Taylor is getting the message that the BOE may not be on board with this chaos and MCPS' junk surveys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't it be a conflict of interest for Karla Silvestre to be evangelizing and pushing dual enrollment during board meetings as she did during the program analysis Q&A, given her role with Montgomery College?
You are on to something
There is that. But I think that Silvestre is just trying to come up with some way to reintroduce rigor that the superintendent is removing from the system.
I don't believe that MC has the capacity to take on so many students at once. And, it's depressing to hear people suggest remote learning as a solution.
Silvestre is blissfully continuing to support the have/have-not dichotomy of in-person classes vs. MC classes (or remote), with all the burden those bring. It helps keep her MC job more relevant, and most are too oblivious to identify the discriminatory disparity in the cheerfully promoted "opportunity to take college courses" messaging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Porter is in over her head, but I wonder if Taylor is getting the message that the BOE may not be on board with this chaos and MCPS' junk surveys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shouldn't it be a conflict of interest for Karla Silvestre to be evangelizing and pushing dual enrollment during board meetings as she did during the program analysis Q&A, given her role with Montgomery College?
You are on to something
There is that. But I think that Silvestre is just trying to come up with some way to reintroduce rigor that the superintendent is removing from the system.
I don't believe that MC has the capacity to take on so many students at once. And, it's depressing to hear people suggest remote learning as a solution.
Anonymous wrote:Are we really to believe that this is just gross negligence? Because this is what corruption looks like in real time. Follow the money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm concerned about Taylor. Laura Stewart is asking for a slower transition, and Taylor turned that down flat. Key information about transportation costs are now unknowable, per Taylor's comments. The chief academic officer is sure we have all the expertise we need among current educators to duplicate programs regionally. Educators and the community think that isn't the case. Professional education has not been addressed at all; The Chief Academic Officer admitted she wasn't sure what teachers had which expertise and she didn't know which schools they were located in. I wish Taylor could exhibit more flexibility.
The Chief Academic Officer embarrassingly had her butt kicked by Julie Yang on the issue of the contract they declined to approve for surveying students on AP/IB testing. I don't think she's ready for the role she took on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every question the board had on the regional programs analysis Niki Porter (formerly Hazel) answered that it was a great point and that they'd look into it.
So what critical thinking and scenario planning did this woman do? Because it's alarming for her to have this many uncertainties about this stuff at this stage in the game.
Ah..."look into it" Board meetings. Who will look into it? Who will FOLLOWUP? When should stakeholders expect the follow-up?