Anonymous wrote:I don’t know any schools (even public schools) that have given ES homework in many years.
Anonymous wrote:I am a 2nd grade teacher in a public school in MCPS. I am old school so we only use our Chromebooks for assessments. I ignore the admin telling me to have the kids on 30 mins to 1 hour a day. I have math games and enrichment packets with materials they can use and work together as a group to solve if they are early finishers. I used to have a science lab and writing center but the principal told me it was exclusiveto the other kids who never got to finis in time or got pulled and had no access to them. I do have a smart board and I use it to display objectives and page numbers and pictures to read aloud primarily as they are from the curriculum but in Math, we use manipulative and I use a camera to guide the in math or we use natural materials including our bodies to show math concepts. Parents appreciate that I do not allow kids on screens. During indoor recess we use playdoh, puzzles, legos, and a huge kitchen with checkout machine. The girls have a huge doll house. They love it!
Anonymous wrote:If you want a quality education, unfortunately you have to pay for private.
to the other kids who never got to finis in time or got pulled and had no access to them. I do have a smart board and I use it to display objectives and page numbers and pictures to read aloud primarily as they are from the curriculum but in Math, we use manipulative and I use a camera to guide the in math or we use natural materials including our bodies to show math concepts. Parents appreciate that I do not allow kids on screens. During indoor recess we use playdoh, puzzles, legos, and a huge kitchen with checkout machine. The girls have a huge doll house. They love it!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t do this. Even if you can technically opt out, it isn’t going to be what you think. The teacher isn’t prepared to teach without screens and all the “materials” are on the apps. Your child still isn’t going to get any direct instruction or purposeful assignments if you opt out. They will likely get some canned premade worksheet, maybe. Or they will watch their neighbor’s screen
As a teacher, I agree this is the sad reality.
Anonymous wrote:You can’t do this. Even if you can technically opt out, it isn’t going to be what you think. The teacher isn’t prepared to teach without screens and all the “materials” are on the apps. Your child still isn’t going to get any direct instruction or purposeful assignments if you opt out. They will likely get some canned premade worksheet, maybe. Or they will watch their neighbor’s screen
Anonymous wrote:We can opt out of screens? Ive never heard of that. My public does 1-to-1 beginning in K and so do most of the private schools, with the exception of religious privates.
Anonymous wrote:If you want a quality education, unfortunately you have to pay for private.
Anonymous wrote:Does your school permit parents to opt out of screen use or provide a screen-free classroom? If so, do you opt out? Or if they don't, would you opt out if given a choice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know any schools (even public schools) that have given ES homework in many years.
Sounds made up.
DP. True here too
To add, my public middle school kid gets zero homework
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know any schools (even public schools) that have given ES homework in many years.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know any schools (even public schools) that have given ES homework in many years.