Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Seems clear to me.
Explain it then.
I think their meaning is self-evident but if you can't figure it out, it would be lost on you anyway.
Their meaning is useless and flawed. What they are saying is that public schools can’t produce/have better teachers than private schools because private schools are expensive. The fact that the privates ‘bought’ this teacher out of the public school system in a way confirms what they are saying, but only that the better teachers can be ‘bought out’ not that they don’t exist.
I have to disagree. They made a valid point that holds up.
Neither they nor you can articulate on that point, so it’s not a valid one. You’re entitled to your opinion.
Why should I? It's already clear to anyone who can read and I'm really not interested in your games.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Seems clear to me.
Explain it then.
I think their meaning is self-evident but if you can't figure it out, it would be lost on you anyway.
Their meaning is useless and flawed. What they are saying is that public schools can’t produce/have better teachers than private schools because private schools are expensive. The fact that the privates ‘bought’ this teacher out of the public school system in a way confirms what they are saying, but only that the better teachers can be ‘bought out’ not that they don’t exist.
I have to disagree. They made a valid point that holds up.
Neither they nor you can articulate on that point, so it’s not a valid one. You’re entitled to your opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Seems clear to me.
Explain it then.
I think their meaning is self-evident but if you can't figure it out, it would be lost on you anyway.
Their meaning is useless and flawed. What they are saying is that public schools can’t produce/have better teachers than private schools because private schools are expensive. The fact that the privates ‘bought’ this teacher out of the public school system in a way confirms what they are saying, but only that the better teachers can be ‘bought out’ not that they don’t exist.
I have to disagree. They made a valid point that holds up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Seems clear to me.
Explain it then.
I think their meaning is self-evident but if you can't figure it out, it would be lost on you anyway.
Their meaning is useless and flawed. What they are saying is that public schools can’t produce/have better teachers than private schools because private schools are expensive. The fact that the privates ‘bought’ this teacher out of the public school system in a way confirms what they are saying, but only that the better teachers can be ‘bought out’ not that they don’t exist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Seems clear to me.
Explain it then.
I think their meaning is self-evident but if you can't figure it out, it would be lost on you anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Seems clear to me.
Explain it then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Seems clear to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
This statement/question doesn’t make sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
These private schools take so much money from parents and they need a public school teacher to improve their teams? Now you know why private is worthless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
He's been at Nysmith since 2021. If it was just him, Nysmith would have jumped up in math contest wins the past 2 years - but it hasn't. He built a good program at Longfellow, which is now running well without him. His success at Basis were bolstered by a couple of math prodigies. But it will take him a few years to build such a program at Nysmith.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.
Vern Williams left Longfellow years ago. Maybe he left a legacy but he hasn’t been a teacher there for quite a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Interesting that Longfellow and Carson continue to outperform Cooper even though Cooper is wealthier.
Longfellow has historically dominated Mathcounts, except for a couple of years where there were a handful math prodigies at Basis. I think they have a system to produce good mathcounts results
The common thread was Vern Williams. He's at Nysmith now, if memory serves.