Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter is working very hard in 6th grade, but she's in all advanced classes. They don't offer languages until 7th grade at our school.
However, her friends in regular classes rarely - if ever - are assigned HW. There's a BIG difference btw advanced and regular at this stage, and the gap only increases in high school.
At least there is a distinction. Our MS everyone is in advanced and no one has any work to do. Science and History grades aren't just As they're like 98% looking at them in Edline is exactly like looking at PE scores.
HHow big is your child's middle school, and why are you looking at everybody's grades on Edline?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He gets homework. Sometimes it's easy, other times more challenging. Most of his grades come from work done in class (projects or tests/quizzes). He's blown some tests in a big way (Ds), and yet he still ended up with As. And he can't write. Still, As. If he's getting As, then they all must be getting As.
Sounds like a mistake on the report card, honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter is working very hard in 6th grade, but she's in all advanced classes. They don't offer languages until 7th grade at our school.
However, her friends in regular classes rarely - if ever - are assigned HW. There's a BIG difference btw advanced and regular at this stage, and the gap only increases in high school.
At least there is a distinction. Our MS everyone is in advanced and no one has any work to do. Science and History grades aren't just As they're like 98% looking at them in Edline is exactly like looking at PE scores.
Anonymous wrote:He gets homework. Sometimes it's easy, other times more challenging. Most of his grades come from work done in class (projects or tests/quizzes). He's blown some tests in a big way (Ds), and yet he still ended up with As. And he can't write. Still, As. If he's getting As, then they all must be getting As.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is working very hard in 6th grade, but she's in all advanced classes. They don't offer languages until 7th grade at our school.
However, her friends in regular classes rarely - if ever - are assigned HW. There's a BIG difference btw advanced and regular at this stage, and the gap only increases in high school.
Not happening here in FCPS.
I'm talking about mcps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm the PP whose son is getting his butt kicked. We are in Maryland, but not MCPS. We have differentiated classes, although not as many as I'd like (it would be nice to have some in Science / SS also). I didn't realize that MCPS calls its entire curriculum "advanced." That explains a lot!
MCPS doesn't. Some of the schools in the fancy-pants areas of Montgomery County have decided to do this, presumably because in Lake Fancy-Pants Montgomery County, all of the children are above average.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There has to be a reason why MCPS is listing those classes as GT, I wonder if they have to give a certain amount of classes at an advanced level? This may be a way to put a big checkmark in the right box.
Doesn't surprise me that they got rid of the final exam. If there is a problem in MCPS they just gets rid of it instead of fixing it. Remember when there was a problem with the Algebra exams, they just got rid of them. If it's broke, they don't fix it, they just get rid of it.
No, I don't remember this, because it didn't happen.
Only 20-40% of students passed math exams last year. They got rid of them this year. How can you say you don't remember this or it didn't happen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There has to be a reason why MCPS is listing those classes as GT, I wonder if they have to give a certain amount of classes at an advanced level? This may be a way to put a big checkmark in the right box.
Doesn't surprise me that they got rid of the final exam. If there is a problem in MCPS they just gets rid of it instead of fixing it. Remember when there was a problem with the Algebra exams, they just got rid of them. If it's broke, they don't fix it, they just get rid of it.
No, I don't remember this, because it didn't happen.
Only 20-40% of students passed math exams last year. They got rid of them this year. How can you say you don't remember this or it didn't happen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There has to be a reason why MCPS is listing those classes as GT, I wonder if they have to give a certain amount of classes at an advanced level? This may be a way to put a big checkmark in the right box.
Doesn't surprise me that they got rid of the final exam. If there is a problem in MCPS they just gets rid of it instead of fixing it. Remember when there was a problem with the Algebra exams, they just got rid of them. If it's broke, they don't fix it, they just get rid of it.
No, I don't remember this, because it didn't happen.