Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am ok with 2.0. I don't remember learning fractions in 2nd grade, so I'll consider that my 7 year old is learning fractions to be a bonus.
China and Europe must be laughing their arses off at how behind our curriculum now is. Unless they too recently revamped to massively slow down, cover less topics, and teach to the bottom.
2.0 is terrible for the kids who really love math and would have been the ones in the advanced math under the old curriculum. I agree with making sure that the kids are getting a good foundation, but my first grader loves math and is bored in class. Like i do, he has thatbkind f a mind. Once taught he just gets it- he wamts to do multiplication and division. He hasn't learn one thing in math this year that he couldn't do by October. I am teaching him at home the things that my older child did in first grade when she was given 2 nd grade math--
I am looking for math camps for next summer-- ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:What is "reform math"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know everybody loves Finland. But Finland is likely Montgomery county taking out everyone who lives on the wrong side of the track. I am not sure any of their lessons are applicable. Also people keep saying they don't start school until 7. But they have universal preschool starts at 3.
Other than a few select pockets, Montgomery Co. in no way can be perceived as an area without diversity socioeconomically. This is a big reason for 2.0. The curriculum allows teachers to meet the kids where they are and relies on ability grouping, especially in language arts.
Anonymous wrote:Preschools in Finland and much of Europe are all play based. They do not teach letters or numbers until age 7, when children are developmentally ready to learn to read, and they learn quickly at that point. What distinguished Finland most is the social aspects of learning. Social development is a huge priority there, whereas here it is completely ignored. I just heard about a study showing that classrooms that emphasized social and emotional learning had fewer behavior problems and better academic learning. As far as math, I have heard that some high school teachers in MCPS and univ. profs say that MCPS pushes kids to be accelerated at the expense of developing a proper foundation in math. They get kids who think they are advanced, they've been pushed to get past calculus, bla bla bla, and in fact are unprepared and have major gaps. So acceleration may not be as great as some think it is.
Which Asians are too accelerated and advanced in math with lots of gaps?
Anonymous wrote:Preschools in Finland and much of Europe are all play based. They do not teach letters or numbers until age 7, when children are developmentally ready to learn to read, and they learn quickly at that point. What distinguished Finland most is the social aspects of learning. Social development is a huge priority there, whereas here it is completely ignored. I just heard about a study showing that classrooms that emphasized social and emotional learning had fewer behavior problems and better academic learning. As far as math, I have heard that some high school teachers in MCPS and univ. profs say that MCPS pushes kids to be accelerated at the expense of developing a proper foundation in math. They get kids who think they are advanced, they've been pushed to get past calculus, bla bla bla, and in fact are unprepared and have major gaps. So acceleration may not be as great as some think it is.
Anonymous wrote:I know everybody loves Finland. But Finland is likely Montgomery county taking out everyone who lives on the wrong side of the track. I am not sure any of their lessons are applicable. Also people keep saying they don't start school until 7. But they have universal preschool starts at 3.