Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP at 7;55, what I disagree with is the other PP's idea that "Sacre bleu, est-ce que un docteur dans la maison!" is correct French.
In other words, no real point to your post on this thread about academic achievement in Maryland/US schools. Fair enough - thank you for making that clear.
Anonymous wrote:PP at 7;55, what I disagree with is the other PP's idea that "Sacre bleu, est-ce que un docteur dans la maison!" is correct French.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For Dr. Joshua Starr and MCPS:
EXTRA, EXTRA, READ ALL ABOUT IT: THE GREATEST AND RICHEST POWER ON EARTH -- USA: # 1 in sports (Olympics) and # 20 - 30 in education (primary and secondary school)
...US News and World Report
...Sacre bleu, est-ce que un docteur dans la maison!
If you're trying to make the point that the US does not do well with teaching foreign languages, I'm persuaded.
Anonymous wrote:For Dr. Joshua Starr and MCPS:
EXTRA, EXTRA, READ ALL ABOUT IT: THE GREATEST AND RICHEST POWER ON EARTH -- USA: # 1 in sports (Olympics) and # 20 - 30 in education (primary and secondary school)
...US News and World Report
...Sacre bleu, est-ce que un docteur dans la maison!
For one, participation in sports is self selecting and optional. And only the most motivated and talented kids are selected for travel teams etc. If parents aren't happy with the way the team or league is working, they can switch. Coaches and league administrators are motivated to keep parents happy.
Public schools are not self selecting, and schools have no motivating factor to keep kids in the system. The majority are stuck in the system without any options. So if you have a motivated, academically focused child, sooner or later they will be turned off and bored by public school. FWIW, I do not have super athletic kids, and keep them active in rec leagues (since there is barely any recess or PE in public school at the ES and MS levels). I'm the PP who is pulling my GT/LD out of public because I'm lucky enough to have private as an option, and I will not let him founder in public school.
And thank you to the poster who brought up the fact that the US does well in the Olympics, but consistently ranks well below other industrialized countries in education.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/12/03/248...-slide-in-math-reading-science
Wow. This post is a little over the top. And it's not cool to attack someone's kid, nor is it cool to slam community colleges. Community colleges can really benefit some students, including those you claim to support in your third paragraph -- those who have fewer outside resources
Anonymous wrote:14:16 AKA MCPS Snowflake poster has graced us again with their presence. Where do you teach when you aren't working on the curriculum committee, Strayer University or McDonalds U? Personally, I am fed up with your MCPS walks on water, this is so wonderful nonsense.
You may be happy that you are screwing parents who are more successful and educated than you but guess what....these parents will not sit by and just let their kids drop down to your levels. They will do outside enrichment, teach them at home, drop out for private schools, or go to Virginia. Your kid who inherited your lack of motivation and IQ will still be at the bottom not caring about how he does in school and on a path to community college. Nothing will change other than a decline of what was once a good school system.
The real damage is to the kids that have parents who don't have the education, time, or means to educate their kids beyond the lowered expectations of you and your colleagues in MCPS. For these kids, education is their only shot to change their circumstances but they have less of a chance now thanks to people like you. You may think your job is just to justify your own existence, hide the underachievers, and pass them through the system but this is wrong. Just dead wrong for kids who need education.
Anonymous wrote:Several posters have demonstrated here the US public education system is neither egalitarian nor equitable. Neither is the US healthcare system for that matter. Despite the fact, we spend vastly more than any other country on earth on public education and healthcare for worse outcomes. In this respect, America is a global outlier and anathema.
I'll step in for the poster. Proficient was the wrong word. I'll let you substitute any word of your choosing. It doesn't change the thrust of the assertions.
MCPS does not encourage, promote, or provide pathways for proficient students to take on more challenge.
This is acceptable in music and athletics but not academics.