Anonymous wrote:If every kid was handed $10k for schooling, why wouldn’t private schools just increase tuition by $10k? The rich will always have access to more. Charter schools have been thoroughly shown not to increase student achievement among similar demographics.
Honestly, I hope this pandemic takes away the stigma of homeschooling and proves that many parents are capable of teaching their own child to a satisfactory level. It’s not hard to teach one kid at a time better than a teacher can teach 30.
Anonymous wrote:I'd be cool with a voucher, it would create competition and make fcps step up
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear people say this a lot but I don’t really know what they mean? Are people really saying that in 10 years we won’t have 5 day face to face school anymore? If so, why not? This pandemic won’t last forever. Why wouldn’t schools go back to normal after the pandemic passes?
Traditional public school served only a few types of children anyway. It was designed for middle class white cis girls without special needs. Everyone else is an afterthought. As a teacher, I did my best but I’m thrilled that parents and kids are figuring out better methods of education and won’t return to what did not work for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear people say this a lot but I don’t really know what they mean? Are people really saying that in 10 years we won’t have 5 day face to face school anymore? If so, why not? This pandemic won’t last forever. Why wouldn’t schools go back to normal after the pandemic passes?
Traditional public school served only a few types of children anyway. It was designed for middle class white cis girls without special needs. Everyone else is an afterthought. As a teacher, I did my best but I’m thrilled that parents and kids are figuring out better methods of education and won’t return to what did not work for them.
White cis girls???
different poster, but i'm guessing girls bc they are assumed to have more of an ability to sit quietly and do their work (boys more rambunctious?). I have studious boys who love to sit and do work, but those are the stereotypes.
Ok, but what is cis?
Anonymous wrote:I'm the PP FCPS poster. Are my complaints specific to FCPS? Yes. DH and I are k-6 alumni of FCPS. We stayed in the area to raise our children with the benefit of an outstanding education that FCPS would afford. Perhaps we were naive.
Our parents moved to Fairfax County when the public schools were top notch. Word of mouth traveled fast among military and fed government workers; move here so your kids can go to this "best of the best" high school. There was tremendous school and community pride. We were well-prepared for college; DH was in one of the first GT cohorts and we both took the newer AP classes.
We've had a student in FCPS since 2004 and have witnessed a precipitous decline in academic rigor and school infrastructure, to name just two. Every.single.issue.gets politicized and overly complicated. School principals are loathe to intervene or hear complaints. They're too busy putting out small fires, figuring out how they can keep their federal and state funding for the almighty programs.
FCPS has become entangled in bureaucracy and now speaks collectively in jargon. I struggle to understand the school board's "messaging" and communications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear people say this a lot but I don’t really know what they mean? Are people really saying that in 10 years we won’t have 5 day face to face school anymore? If so, why not? This pandemic won’t last forever. Why wouldn’t schools go back to normal after the pandemic passes?
Traditional public school served only a few types of children anyway. It was designed for middle class white cis girls without special needs. Everyone else is an afterthought. As a teacher, I did my best but I’m thrilled that parents and kids are figuring out better methods of education and won’t return to what did not work for them.
White cis girls???
different poster, but i'm guessing girls bc they are assumed to have more of an ability to sit quietly and do their work (boys more rambunctious?). I have studious boys who love to sit and do work, but those are the stereotypes.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the PP FCPS poster. Are my complaints specific to FCPS? Yes. DH and I are k-6 alumni of FCPS. We stayed in the area to raise our children with the benefit of an outstanding education that FCPS would afford. Perhaps we were naive.
Our parents moved to Fairfax County when the public schools were top notch. Word of mouth traveled fast among military and fed government workers; move here so your kids can go to this "best of the best" high school. There was tremendous school and community pride. We were well-prepared for college; DH was in one of the first GT cohorts and we both took the newer AP classes.
We've had a student in FCPS since 2004 and have witnessed a precipitous decline in academic rigor and school infrastructure, to name just two. Every.single.issue.gets politicized and overly complicated. School principals are loathe to intervene or hear complaints. They're too busy putting out small fires, figuring out how they can keep their federal and state funding for the almighty programs.
FCPS has become entangled in bureaucracy and now speaks collectively in jargon. I struggle to understand the school board's "messaging" and communications.
Anonymous wrote:Precisely because I have lost hope in FCPS; the system is broken beyond repair.
And, I was becoming discouraged and frustrated with FCPS with each passing school year, well before COVID.
- overcrowded schools (trailers and modulars for decades, staff using storage rooms for offices)
- overcrowded classrooms (poor classroom management, constant distractions, shared supplies)
- focus on just about everything except academics (school name changes, unisex bathrooms, equity and diversity, SOL teaching to the test, no textbooks, school as social services, endless award ceremonies, surveys, assessments, "programming"...
- but with above-listed under consideration, woe to the parent of an "average" student who needs extra instruction in math, for example. Help is NOT available. Now, if it is nearly time for SOLs and your child is "at risk" for a low score or actually "fails" an SOL, then you'll get an offer of essentially test prep.
- DH has tutored DC in math all through ES. Then we hired a private tutor for balance of MS/HS.
- My 2DC learned more via a well-known tutoring center than they ever learned in FCPS.