Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. MCPS is using the following numbers:
220 in the Fall
Or
238 in the Spring
The kids must meet one of those two score.
There are also 2 other required criteria.
So 90th%? Sorry, but that is crap, particularly as our DC’s class didn’t even cover all of the material.
I think that is the point... if they didn't cover the material and don't know it, compacting curriculum and moving forward in addition to what was missed already would not be beneficial.
The same would be true of all kids in that class unless they had outside support and tutoring to cover that material. So much for equity, especially in the pandemic. So curious how this will impact DCs class where many of the kids were in the care of cousins and older siblings and just joining class and submitting assignments was a big deal. Such a crappy way for the county to manage this. Let’s be as disruptive as possible to kids midstream.
They covered all the material at our school. Not sure which schools are failing to keep up and why.
Ours too. I think its parents just justifying why their kids aren't doing well and don't feel like getting involved and monitoring so they are blaming the school instead.
JFC, I do more than monitor my kid; I check their homework and ensure they get the concepts covered. My child got straight As - and strong As - across the year. They thrives on the compacted math environment and loved the class. They didn’t get a 230 and so now they don’t continue? That’s just wrong. They are doing well and no less equipped to do well in math 5/6 than any of their fellow students.
Hang your ego on something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. MCPS is using the following numbers:
220 in the Fall
Or
238 in the Spring
The kids must meet one of those two score.
There are also 2 other required criteria.
So 90th%? Sorry, but that is crap, particularly as our DC’s class didn’t even cover all of the material.
I think that is the point... if they didn't cover the material and don't know it, compacting curriculum and moving forward in addition to what was missed already would not be beneficial.
The same would be true of all kids in that class unless they had outside support and tutoring to cover that material. So much for equity, especially in the pandemic. So curious how this will impact DCs class where many of the kids were in the care of cousins and older siblings and just joining class and submitting assignments was a big deal. Such a crappy way for the county to manage this. Let’s be as disruptive as possible to kids midstream.
They covered all the material at our school. Not sure which schools are failing to keep up and why.
Ours too. I think its parents just justifying why their kids aren't doing well and don't feel like getting involved and monitoring so they are blaming the school instead.
JFC, I do more than monitor my kid; I check their homework and ensure they get the concepts covered. My child got straight As - and strong As - across the year. They thrives on the compacted math environment and loved the class. They didn’t get a 230 and so now they don’t continue? That’s just wrong. They are doing well and no less equipped to do well in math 5/6 than any of their fellow students.
Hang your ego on something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. MCPS is using the following numbers:
220 in the Fall
Or
238 in the Spring
The kids must meet one of those two score.
There are also 2 other required criteria.
So 90th%? Sorry, but that is crap, particularly as our DC’s class didn’t even cover all of the material.
I think that is the point... if they didn't cover the material and don't know it, compacting curriculum and moving forward in addition to what was missed already would not be beneficial.
The same would be true of all kids in that class unless they had outside support and tutoring to cover that material. So much for equity, especially in the pandemic. So curious how this will impact DCs class where many of the kids were in the care of cousins and older siblings and just joining class and submitting assignments was a big deal. Such a crappy way for the county to manage this. Let’s be as disruptive as possible to kids midstream.
They covered all the material at our school. Not sure which schools are failing to keep up and why.
Ours too. I think its parents just justifying why their kids aren't doing well and don't feel like getting involved and monitoring so they are blaming the school instead.
JFC, I do more than monitor my kid; I check their homework and ensure they get the concepts covered. My child got straight As - and strong As - across the year. They thrives on the compacted math environment and loved the class. They didn’t get a 230 and so now they don’t continue? That’s just wrong. They are doing well and no less equipped to do well in math 5/6 than any of their fellow students.
Hang your ego on something else.
PP, I understand your frustration, but you are answering a troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The content that was left out this year is discussed in detail in this topic:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/968637.page
Everything was not taught this year in 4/5 or 5/6 unless the teachers found a way to teach everything that MCPS lists as omitted in the documents outlining was wasn't covered.
Our school somehow managed. The kids are now in Eureka 6 module 4. They started out part way through 5 and didn't skip anything.
You are talking about a different class. Compacted 5/6 is currently in Module 4 and that is where they will finish the year. Each class is in that module. The problem is that the full year of Grade 6 goes through Module 6 and the classes will only be finishing through Module 4. What is so hard to understand? Your class is not special. They are not finishing the curriculum just like every other class in the county.
A lot of parents don’t understand what MCPS is doing because it is like inside baseball. They made decisions about what units to skip in 4/5 and 5/6 at the beginning of the year, but they did not reveal the issue until February. Now they want to hold students accountable for missing the material, rather than figuring out how to fix it next year. Parents can enrich in outside course or for free, but they have to know the whole story in order to do so. I am not usually an MCPS sucks type, but this math thing is maddening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. MCPS is using the following numbers:
220 in the Fall
Or
238 in the Spring
The kids must meet one of those two score.
There are also 2 other required criteria.
So 90th%? Sorry, but that is crap, particularly as our DC’s class didn’t even cover all of the material.
I think that is the point... if they didn't cover the material and don't know it, compacting curriculum and moving forward in addition to what was missed already would not be beneficial.
The same would be true of all kids in that class unless they had outside support and tutoring to cover that material. So much for equity, especially in the pandemic. So curious how this will impact DCs class where many of the kids were in the care of cousins and older siblings and just joining class and submitting assignments was a big deal. Such a crappy way for the county to manage this. Let’s be as disruptive as possible to kids midstream.
They covered all the material at our school. Not sure which schools are failing to keep up and why.
Ours too. I think its parents just justifying why their kids aren't doing well and don't feel like getting involved and monitoring so they are blaming the school instead.
JFC, I do more than monitor my kid; I check their homework and ensure they get the concepts covered. My child got straight As - and strong As - across the year. They thrives on the compacted math environment and loved the class. They didn’t get a 230 and so now they don’t continue? That’s just wrong. They are doing well and no less equipped to do well in math 5/6 than any of their fellow students.
Hang your ego on something else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. MCPS is using the following numbers:
220 in the Fall
Or
238 in the Spring
The kids must meet one of those two score.
There are also 2 other required criteria.
So 90th%? Sorry, but that is crap, particularly as our DC’s class didn’t even cover all of the material.
I think that is the point... if they didn't cover the material and don't know it, compacting curriculum and moving forward in addition to what was missed already would not be beneficial.
It's so strange this is happening at some schools. Ours is completely on track like any other year. Not sure why some schools aren't keeping up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The content that was left out this year is discussed in detail in this topic:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/968637.page
Everything was not taught this year in 4/5 or 5/6 unless the teachers found a way to teach everything that MCPS lists as omitted in the documents outlining was wasn't covered.
Our school somehow managed. The kids are now in Eureka 6 module 4. They started out part way through 5 and didn't skip anything.
You are talking about a different class. Compacted 5/6 is currently in Module 4 and that is where they will finish the year. Each class is in that module. The problem is that the full year of Grade 6 goes through Module 6 and the classes will only be finishing through Module 4. What is so hard to understand? Your class is not special. They are not finishing the curriculum just like every other class in the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. MCPS is using the following numbers:
220 in the Fall
Or
238 in the Spring
The kids must meet one of those two score.
There are also 2 other required criteria.
So 90th%? Sorry, but that is crap, particularly as our DC’s class didn’t even cover all of the material.
I think that is the point... if they didn't cover the material and don't know it, compacting curriculum and moving forward in addition to what was missed already would not be beneficial.
The same would be true of all kids in that class unless they had outside support and tutoring to cover that material. So much for equity, especially in the pandemic. So curious how this will impact DCs class where many of the kids were in the care of cousins and older siblings and just joining class and submitting assignments was a big deal. Such a crappy way for the county to manage this. Let’s be as disruptive as possible to kids midstream.
They covered all the material at our school. Not sure which schools are failing to keep up and why.
Ours too. I think its parents just justifying why their kids aren't doing well and don't feel like getting involved and monitoring so they are blaming the school instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The content that was left out this year is discussed in detail in this topic:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/968637.page
Everything was not taught this year in 4/5 or 5/6 unless the teachers found a way to teach everything that MCPS lists as omitted in the documents outlining was wasn't covered.
Our school somehow managed. The kids are now in Eureka 6 module 4. They started out part way through 5 and didn't skip anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The content that was left out this year is discussed in detail in this topic:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/968637.page
Everything was not taught this year in 4/5 or 5/6 unless the teachers found a way to teach everything that MCPS lists as omitted in the documents outlining was wasn't covered.
Our school somehow managed. The kids are now in Eureka 6 module 4. They started out part way through 5 and didn't skip anything.
Anonymous wrote:The content that was left out this year is discussed in detail in this topic:
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/968637.page
Everything was not taught this year in 4/5 or 5/6 unless the teachers found a way to teach everything that MCPS lists as omitted in the documents outlining was wasn't covered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. MCPS is using the following numbers:
220 in the Fall
Or
238 in the Spring
The kids must meet one of those two score.
There are also 2 other required criteria.
So 90th%? Sorry, but that is crap, particularly as our DC’s class didn’t even cover all of the material.
I think that is the point... if they didn't cover the material and don't know it, compacting curriculum and moving forward in addition to what was missed already would not be beneficial.