Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what exactly is the new plan and policy?
Because they cut off the livestream, we're all in the dark. I'm guessing we'll get the details when news reports are filed later today? This is all so bizarre.
MCPS's largest student racial group is Hispanic, and 36.6% of Hispanic students are chronically absent (based on MSDE report card).
Whey are more than 1/3 of Hispanic students chronically absent? Are they helping their family or are they doing something else?
In fact some Hispanic groups surveyed MCPS's Hispanic students and found that many of them are not going to school because they were undereducated in their home countries (many of them are immigrant children and are ESOL students) and cannot keep up with the work, even the ESOL work.
I look forward to see whether MCPS addresses this massive problem in the school system.
Right.
This is no longer a school system primarily of UMC kids. It is increasingly a system of high needs kids.
2021-2022 numbers:
40% of the kids are FARMS
18% are ESOL
33% Hispanic
22% Black
25% White
14% Asian
This is in a county that is 42% white and with a 5% poverty rate.
Think about that. Essentially, white families with financial means have fled the system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what exactly is the new plan and policy?
Because they cut off the livestream, we're all in the dark. I'm guessing we'll get the details when news reports are filed later today? This is all so bizarre.
MCPS's largest student racial group is Hispanic, and 36.6% of Hispanic students are chronically absent (based on MSDE report card).
Whey are more than 1/3 of Hispanic students chronically absent? Are they helping their family or are they doing something else?
In fact some Hispanic groups surveyed MCPS's Hispanic students and found that many of them are not going to school because they were undereducated in their home countries (many of them are immigrant children and are ESOL students) and cannot keep up with the work, even the ESOL work.
I look forward to see whether MCPS addresses this massive problem in the school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what exactly is the new plan and policy?
Because they cut off the livestream, we're all in the dark. I'm guessing we'll get the details when news reports are filed later today? This is all so bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:So what exactly is the new plan and policy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they want better attendance, how about keep kids safe from viral infections like COVID? Especially mine who is medically vulnerable
What are you hoping they do for this OP? If they close again or require masks again there will be riots. Not happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they want better attendance, how about keep kids safe from viral infections like COVID? Especially mine who is medically vulnerable
Kids get sick. It’s normal. And you certainly should have understood and expected that long before you had kids.
Maybe you can find bubble boy's special suit.
Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that HS kids used to have to have fewer than X absences to pass a class. Even if they had the grades and turned everything in, if they missed more than X classes unexcused, they failed that class. Post Covid they got rid of that and now kids can rarely show up, do a few D assignments and pass. There is no incentive to attend.
I also have to say that too many teachers use class time as work time- kids on their Chromebooks completely worksheets and assignments. So some kids are just like I can do this from home…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Or by school. I bet there's a pocket of consistent, serious offenders that need to be prioritized and dealt with most urgently.
And some of the absenteeism numbers have to do with failed admin leadership in those schools.
I doubt they will. Because it will mostly be a certain demographic in certain pockets, and the optics are not good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my DD's elementary school they sent a survey recently about what the school can do to get the kids to attend more (My DD goes to a Title 1 school with a high mobility rate. I know a few kids in her class were gone for long periods of time). Did other schools get this?
Why are kids gone for long periods of time? Is it illness or lack of transportation?