Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I realize it’s frustrating, but there’s just no way any teacher, in any school system or independent school, can create 25 different customized curriculums for 25 different students. That’s not “school,” it’s private tutoring.
This is why (as noted at the top of this thread) profoundly gifted students are often homeschooled.
What? I went to a differentiated public school. There was in school gifted pullout and full day ones, depending on the needs. Just because you haven’t seen it doesn’t mean it isn’t possible. It is possible and effective. Unfortunately education is now all about not hurting feelings instead of education, and it would hurt too much to know that others were on different tracks. So much stupidity in education right now.
+1 I am profoundly gifted (feel ridiculous writing that but it’s true) and benefitted greatly from a pull-out program in ES and differentiation in middle and high school. Throw in a library card and you’re all set. I would have had a fit if anyone suggested homeschooling. Public schools absolutely can accommodate this population. DCPS chooses not to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I realize it’s frustrating, but there’s just no way any teacher, in any school system or independent school, can create 25 different customized curriculums for 25 different students. That’s not “school,” it’s private tutoring.
This is why (as noted at the top of this thread) profoundly gifted students are often homeschooled.
What? I went to a differentiated public school. There was in school gifted pullout and full day ones, depending on the needs. Just because you haven’t seen it doesn’t mean it isn’t possible. It is possible and effective. Unfortunately education is now all about not hurting feelings instead of education, and it would hurt too much to know that others were on different tracks. So much stupidity in education right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I realize it’s frustrating, but there’s just no way any teacher, in any school system or independent school, can create 25 different customized curriculums for 25 different students. That’s not “school,” it’s private tutoring.
This is why (as noted at the top of this thread) profoundly gifted students are often homeschooled.
What? I went to a differentiated public school. There was in school gifted pullout and full day ones, depending on the needs. Just because you haven’t seen it doesn’t mean it isn’t possible. It is possible and effective. Unfortunately education is now all about not hurting feelings instead of education, and it would hurt too much to know that others were on different tracks. So much stupidity in education right now.
Anonymous wrote:I realize it’s frustrating, but there’s just no way any teacher, in any school system or independent school, can create 25 different customized curriculums for 25 different students. That’s not “school,” it’s private tutoring.
This is why (as noted at the top of this thread) profoundly gifted students are often homeschooled.
Anonymous wrote:I realize it’s frustrating, but there’s just no way any teacher, in any school system or independent school, can create 25 different customized curriculums for 25 different students. That’s not “school,” it’s private tutoring.
This is why (as noted at the top of this thread) profoundly gifted students are often homeschooled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. My perspective. I have 20 - 25 students in my class. I differentiate in person instruction as much as possible. I am one person. Computer programs help immensely with differentiation as they meet the student where they are at and take them further. I am guided by standards and curriculum. Many parents just don't understand the teacher's perspective. All they see is my child is not getting what is needed. By all means use other resources like Mathnasium and tutors. Just don't expect the teacher to come up with 20 individual programs. You'll scare them out of teaching. In your case I'd talk to the teacher about your concerns and take little steps.
Fantastic, Mathnasium and tutors. That's what my younger kid's 5th grade DCPS math teacher told us after we realized that our bright kid was more than a year behind in math a year ago. Our kid has happily worked through 4th, 5th and most of 6th grade math in the last year at Mathnasium. The thing is, Mathnasium runs families $350/month (no scholarship options). The ELA tutor we hired, a retired parochial school teacher who would come to our home, ran us $115/hour. We needed the tutor because our 5th grader was writing at around a 2nd grade level, and refusing to accept parental inputs to improve without anybody at our DCPS caring a whit. She'd get 4s on report cards for ELA when she couldn't multiply, capitalize, spell or write a grammatical paragraph to save her life. She'd get 4s for math, too, although she obviously couldn't handle grade-level math post Covid.
What seems to guide all aspects of DCPS instruction are equity concerns and iron-clad WTU protection for teachers (read building and maintaining elaborate smoke screens to paper over epic virtual learning catastrophes). There are no formal GT program in DCPS because they aren't fair to low-income URM children. When you urge families to use other resources aren't you saying, only students from well-off families qualify for effective post Covid remediation and above-grade level instruction, fine by me. Shame on DCPS employees and leaders for not telling it like it is.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. My perspective. I have 20 - 25 students in my class. I differentiate in person instruction as much as possible. I am one person. Computer programs help immensely with differentiation as they meet the student where they are at and take them further. I am guided by standards and curriculum. Many parents just don't understand the teacher's perspective. All they see is my child is not getting what is needed. By all means use other resources like Mathnasium and tutors. Just don't expect the teacher to come up with 20 individual programs. You'll scare them out of teaching. In your case I'd talk to the teacher about your concerns and take little steps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our ES has (in very rare cases) allowed kids to take math 2 or 3 grade levels up when appropriate.
I’ve seen this in a few threads, but I have never heard of this happening at my ES. Can anyone name a non-T1 school where an individual kid actually goes to a higher grade’s classroom for a single subject like math?
In a non-T1 you'd ideally have a group of same-age kids who are advanced.
Ludlow-Taylor has at least one kid doing this.
I am skeptical that most non-T1s have a group of kids who need to be 2-3 years ahead at the ES level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our ES has (in very rare cases) allowed kids to take math 2 or 3 grade levels up when appropriate.
I’ve seen this in a few threads, but I have never heard of this happening at my ES. Can anyone name a non-T1 school where an individual kid actually goes to a higher grade’s classroom for a single subject like math?
Happens all the time at BASIS.