Anonymous wrote:
The outstanding schools have little diversity. None of their resources need to go to bringing the low performers up to speed. Spend a day at a school in Potomac vs a school in Wheaton and you will see what parents are upset about. Everyone thinks they want diversity but have no idea what real diversity is and the impact it makes. The well to do latino or black child with 2 successful parents has completely different values than a child that has 2 parents that don't speak English, work low paying jobs, and/or don't see the value of a good education. You can't keep throwing valuable resources into fixing a situation that isn't fixable. i am not saying to give up on these kids, but don't expect that by mixing them in with higher performers it is going to do any good. It will bring the high performers down and marginally help maybe some of the slightly more motivated kids. You have to segregate so that each child is getting the instruction and challenges that they need.
Anonymous wrote:I've spoken with parents who have older kids about why MCPS was considered good in the past. Based on our poor experience, I don't understand how it could have ever been good. Some parents had an interesting comment that the teaching wasn't better or worse before but the system embraced academic achievement and didn't get in a kid's way if they were motivated to learn. 2.0 is a complete reversal where academic achievement his avoided at all costs and kids are supposed to level off to let all the underperforming kids look equal to them.
Anonymous wrote:You would think this would be a good place to come for some advice but . . . you get the same angry anti-immigrant rants no matter what question you ask about MCPS, so you need to take that into consideration. We moved from Massachusetts which was recently rated the best schools but MCPS has more to offer than most of the good suburban schools there because it is county as opposed to town based, which poses its own problems of course. MCPS is huge, and it serves a diverse population. The prior Superintendent made it a priority to try to improve the quality of schools serving lower-income folks with some success, this is one of the things that drives some of the posters nuts because it is not their kids. But it is the right thing to do. The problem the County has is trying to serve the various constituencies -- but at the HS level, there are good schools throughout the District, and I assume this is true at the elementary school level too (MS everywhere are a mixed bag). The current Superintendent seems much less focussed than the prior -- he is young and ambitious but was recently publicly rejected for consideration for the NY School job and I think he is likely trying to figure out how to improve his public reputation, and he seems less focussed on improving the district. There is a new Curriculum and there has been some problems with the roll out, but that is not unique to MCPS. Long and short, these are some of the best public schools in the country, no matter how you measure them, they are not perfect and could be better but the problem is not that lower-income folks are sapping all of the resources. The problem, if there is one, is that it is big, with a strong teachers' union that contributed to the decision not to extend the school year which likely hurt on the Algebra test scores this year, diverse and growing, with a Superintendent trying to figure out how to make his name here. Many of the individual schools are truly outstanding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.
Montgomery County has positioned themselves for only the rich who can afford private and don't need county services and the poor. They don't want the "middle" class/income families and are running them out.
Then they will need to try harder. My household is the median household income in Montgomery County, and we like it here just fine. We're not going anywhere.
I grew up here and I can't wait to bail. If we could get what we put into our house we'd move to Howard or another county. We can get a bigger house, less traffic, closer to my husband's job and the schools are better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.
Montgomery County has positioned themselves for only the rich who can afford private and don't need county services and the poor. They don't want the "middle" class/income families and are running them out.
Then they will need to try harder. My household is the median household income in Montgomery County, and we like it here just fine. We're not going anywhere.
I grew up here and I can't wait to bail. If we could get what we put into our house we'd move to Howard or another county. We can get a bigger house, less traffic, closer to my husband's job and the schools are better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.
Montgomery County has positioned themselves for only the rich who can afford private and don't need county services and the poor. They don't want the "middle" class/income families and are running them out.
Then they will need to try harder. My household is the median household income in Montgomery County, and we like it here just fine. We're not going anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:It is supposed to rank quite high within the nation as a school system. If that is indeed true then I shudder at what kinds of schools are in the US.
I would really rank it very low. I was educated in a 3rd world country and the education I received in my home country was superior by far.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the OP - It is all relative - parents and kids who have had a great school experience prior will probably find MCPS lacking. Many who start with MCPS might not know any different/better. It greatly depends on your childs current school size, culture, overall teacher quality and your child's comfort/friends at school. So many variables - within MCPS and between kids. But overall, even in the "good" schools, it is best to expect just an average experience these days - that way you will not be too disappointed .
So the reason I'm happy with our experiences in MCPS is because I'm too ignorant to know better. Thank you for enlightening me.
Anonymous wrote:It is supposed to rank quite high within the nation as a school system. If that is indeed true then I shudder at what kinds of schools are in the US.
I would really rank it very low. I was educated in a 3rd world country and the education I received in my home country was superior by far.
Anonymous wrote:To the OP - It is all relative - parents and kids who have had a great school experience prior will probably find MCPS lacking. Many who start with MCPS might not know any different/better. It greatly depends on your childs current school size, culture, overall teacher quality and your child's comfort/friends at school. So many variables - within MCPS and between kids. But overall, even in the "good" schools, it is best to expect just an average experience these days - that way you will not be too disappointed .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the best thing about VA schools is the fact that they have a program for a very sizable chunk of advanced kids to challenge them. MD's program for those at the very top end only fits about 3% of the kids in the county so is very limited.
The chunk is so sizeable that the challenge is not really that great.I prefer MCPS in this regard. 25% shouldn;t need a seperate class.
Anonymous wrote:I think the best thing about VA schools is the fact that they have a program for a very sizable chunk of advanced kids to challenge them. MD's program for those at the very top end only fits about 3% of the kids in the county so is very limited.