Anonymous wrote:"Anonymous wrote:
For 2016: http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/uploadedFiles/d...6/superintendent/AppendixC.pdf
27 or less for Gr 1 to 3
29 or less for gr 4 and 5
K - These positions are allocated on a ratio of one teacher for every 26 students and one for every 18 students at the focus schools
Sorry but this is PC bullshit."
Agree that it is bad that low FARM schools have such high numbers but there is just no way high FARM schools could cope with higher ratios than they are now given that a good chunk of classes come in without even having gone to preschool and often not speaking English. It would be impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's first grade class has 18 kids...we are MCPS and neither focus nor Title 1. It's not all doom and gloom out there folks.
This is what bothers me - MCPS has a policy that tax collections are not tied directly to one school - the total collections are to be allocated across all schools so the richest areas don't have "more and better" and the poorest aren't left with nothing. That is great. In practice, however, the redistribution isn't equal. All non-title 1 & focus schools should really have equivalent class sizes. I'm fine with Focus schools & title 1 schools having even better ratios, as long as those are the same for all title 1 & all focus. That would be an equal distribution of resources. And it does seem the schools that are tagged as the wealthiest or the highest scoring are dealing with the largest class sizes. With few to no para educators to assist. This has only been going on for a few years, but at some point, it will show up in the test scores, too. It is simply bad practice. Across the board, studies show that all groups learn better in smaller classes - those lagging behind, those on track & those ahead.
I don't think this is accurate. If you look at the ESs in the Churchill cluster, a few are under capacity, and some of the class sizes are pretty small. Same for some of the Wotton cluster ESs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's first grade class has 18 kids...we are MCPS and neither focus nor Title 1. It's not all doom and gloom out there folks.
This is what bothers me - MCPS has a policy that tax collections are not tied directly to one school - the total collections are to be allocated across all schools so the richest areas don't have "more and better" and the poorest aren't left with nothing. That is great. In practice, however, the redistribution isn't equal. All non-title 1 & focus schools should really have equivalent class sizes. I'm fine with Focus schools & title 1 schools having even better ratios, as long as those are the same for all title 1 & all focus. That would be an equal distribution of resources. And it does seem the schools that are tagged as the wealthiest or the highest scoring are dealing with the largest class sizes. With few to no para educators to assist. This has only been going on for a few years, but at some point, it will show up in the test scores, too. It is simply bad practice. Across the board, studies show that all groups learn better in smaller classes - those lagging behind, those on track & those ahead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can I find out if our school is a Title 1 or focus school. I did some googling without much luck. At the parent meeting on Thursday the presentation referenced the "focus" for the year on ESOL students and reading. I was pleasantly surprised yesterday that DS's K class has only 24 kids in it.
If your K class has 24 kids, you are not a focus or title 1 school. You can look at the "at a glance" sheet for your school on the MCPS website under "school programs". My focus school says "focused academic support - local funds". We have 15 or 16 kids in each K class this year (cap is 18).
And it does seem the schools that are tagged as the wealthiest or the highest scoring are dealing with the largest class sizes. With few to no para educators to assist. This has only been going on for a few years, but at some point, it will show up in the test scores, too. It is simply bad practice. Across the board, studies show that all groups learn better in smaller classes - those lagging behind, those on track & those ahead.
Anonymous wrote:How can I find out if our school is a Title 1 or focus school. I did some googling without much luck. At the parent meeting on Thursday the presentation referenced the "focus" for the year on ESOL students and reading. I was pleasantly surprised yesterday that DS's K class has only 24 kids in it.
Anonymous wrote:My child's first grade class has 18 kids...we are MCPS and neither focus nor Title 1. It's not all doom and gloom out there folks.