Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Lakelands and my children attend Rachel Carson. While we may have some specific criticisms, you won’t find many residents of Lakelands or Kentlands who send their children to RCES who will badmouth it. If we thought it wasn’t good enough, we wouldn’t be sending our children there. I have a child who was selected for the local CES. The curriculum has not hurt my child, who had extremely high PARCC scores, despite the curriculum not being particularly well aligned with common core standards. I have no regrets about choosing our public school.
Out of curiosity, how do you view Kentlands or Lakelands residents who send their kids to private school?
Anonymous wrote:I live in Lakelands and my children attend Rachel Carson. While we may have some specific criticisms, you won’t find many residents of Lakelands or Kentlands who send their children to RCES who will badmouth it. If we thought it wasn’t good enough, we wouldn’t be sending our children there. I have a child who was selected for the local CES. The curriculum has not hurt my child, who had extremely high PARCC scores, despite the curriculum not being particularly well aligned with common core standards. I have no regrets about choosing our public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Lakelands and my children attend Rachel Carson. While we may have some specific criticisms, you won’t find many residents of Lakelands or Kentlands who send their children to RCES who will badmouth it. If we thought it wasn’t good enough, we wouldn’t be sending our children there. I have a child who was selected for the local CES. The curriculum has not hurt my child, who had extremely high PARCC scores, despite the curriculum not being particularly well aligned with common core standards. I have no regrets about choosing our public school.
Of course you won’t. Just like private school parents won’t badmouth their schools. That’s why it’s so hard to get objective information about schools.
I have found a lot of parents will give you a balanced view of their school if you ask for it - in person.
I’ve rarely if ever found that. And if you choose something out of the ordinary, 99% of people will kick you out of their social circles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Lakelands and my children attend Rachel Carson. While we may have some specific criticisms, you won’t find many residents of Lakelands or Kentlands who send their children to RCES who will badmouth it. If we thought it wasn’t good enough, we wouldn’t be sending our children there. I have a child who was selected for the local CES. The curriculum has not hurt my child, who had extremely high PARCC scores, despite the curriculum not being particularly well aligned with common core standards. I have no regrets about choosing our public school.
Of course you won’t. Just like private school parents won’t badmouth their schools. That’s why it’s so hard to get objective information about schools.
I have found a lot of parents will give you a balanced view of their school if you ask for it - in person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Lakelands and my children attend Rachel Carson. While we may have some specific criticisms, you won’t find many residents of Lakelands or Kentlands who send their children to RCES who will badmouth it. If we thought it wasn’t good enough, we wouldn’t be sending our children there. I have a child who was selected for the local CES. The curriculum has not hurt my child, who had extremely high PARCC scores, despite the curriculum not being particularly well aligned with common core standards. I have no regrets about choosing our public school.
Of course you won’t. Just like private school parents won’t badmouth their schools. That’s why it’s so hard to get objective information about schools.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Lakelands and my children attend Rachel Carson. While we may have some specific criticisms, you won’t find many residents of Lakelands or Kentlands who send their children to RCES who will badmouth it. If we thought it wasn’t good enough, we wouldn’t be sending our children there. I have a child who was selected for the local CES. The curriculum has not hurt my child, who had extremely high PARCC scores, despite the curriculum not being particularly well aligned with common core standards. I have no regrets about choosing our public school.
Anonymous wrote:You have time to decide. Send your child to public for K. If all goes well, 1st. And so on. You're involved parents concerned about the issue, so you can keep track of how you're child's doing. If by mid or upper elementary you think the curriculum is failing your kid, then change schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We would likely be looking at Barnesville if we went the private school route. She does not have any special needs.
So go ask people on the private school forum about Barnesville. Ask your neighbors about your local school. Compare. Make a decision. The End.
Why do you have to be so nasty?
DP. Actually I agree with this advice.
Me too, but PP didn’t have to say it with such a tone.
I think OP is obnoxious for coming onto the Maryland public schools forum and asking whether it's good enough for her kid. Why doesn't she go on the private schools forum and ask whether Barnesville is a better option for her child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We would likely be looking at Barnesville if we went the private school route. She does not have any special needs.
So go ask people on the private school forum about Barnesville. Ask your neighbors about your local school. Compare. Make a decision. The End.
Why do you have to be so nasty?
DP. Actually I agree with this advice.
Me too, but PP didn’t have to say it with such a tone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD will start K in fall 2019. We are districted to a good non-W ES in QO cluster. DD is our only child and we can afford private. However we want her to have the benefit of a neighborhood school, so we are torn. Should we apply to local privates or try our ES out and see how it goes? All this talk of 2.0 problems has really freaked us out.
OP, my advice to you is: do not make any decisions based on what you read on DCUM. Really. It's not an accurate reflection of reality. At BEST, it's a fun-house reflection of reality, or reality-TV "reality". And sometimes it's just completely bananas.
Your child will almost certainly be fine at the elementary school you're zoned for, and if she isn't, it won't be because of Curriculum 2.0.
+100000000
Another who agrees. Leaving your neighborhood public and making a massive and potentially unnecessary financial commitment because of what you read on here about 2.0 (which will be gone anyway) is beyond short-sighted.
So what I’m confused about it is that, unless we’re a pilot school, 2.0 could be around for about 2 years at our school before the new curriculum is phased in, right? We would certainly not base our decision solely on what we read here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We would likely be looking at Barnesville if we went the private school route. She does not have any special needs.
So go ask people on the private school forum about Barnesville. Ask your neighbors about your local school. Compare. Make a decision. The End.
Why do you have to be so nasty?
DP. Actually I agree with this advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We would likely be looking at Barnesville if we went the private school route. She does not have any special needs.
So go ask people on the private school forum about Barnesville. Ask your neighbors about your local school. Compare. Make a decision. The End.
Why do you have to be so nasty?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't be freaked out.
What private schools will you be looking at? Are you talking Primary Day/Holton or Seneca Academy or Mary of Nazareth? If Seneca or Mary of Nazareth (or Barnesville/Christ Episcopal), what do you plan to do for high school? QO or a Holton at that point?
If you are referring to a Holton caliber private school and you easily can afford it, then yes, send your daughter there.
Are you involved middle class/umc parents? Does your daughter have any special needs? If she has special needs, I can see how a private would work better. But if you are your run of the mill middle class/umc parents, your child will be absolutely fine in your local elementary school. You can use the money to supplement in any areas you think she is lacking.
Reassess your decision for middle school.
We would likely be looking at Barnesville if we went the private school route. She does not have any special needs.
So go ask people on the private school forum about Barnesville. Ask your neighbors about your local school. Compare. Make a decision. The End.