Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They didn’t get rid of exams because they were too hard to grade. They got rid of them because too many kids failed them.
Exactly. 60-70% were bombing it.
Parents: Why is everyone failing? Is it the curriculum, is it our teachers, are the kids overworked, do they just not try, and/or we pushing these kids into math classes too fast?
MCPS Board: Let's not figure this out. No finals or midterms for anyone. Let's make our already inflated grading scale even easier
Parents: Sounds good to us!
Parents do NOT care what their kids learn. They are just like the county. Test scores and grades for college is the only thing that matters
Kids are failing because many of them have no clue how to study. You’d think every student would be required to take a study skills class before 9th grade. I’m a teacher and I can prepare my students for our exams by going through a study guide prior to the exam and holding extra after school sessions but at the end of the day, I can’t make the students do the work. On my classroom door is a poster that reads “Teachers can open the door but you must walk through it yourself.” Times have changed and when students don’t do well on tests, teachers are the ones who are questioned. This is backwards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They didn’t get rid of exams because they were too hard to grade. They got rid of them because too many kids failed them.
Exactly. 60-70% were bombing it.
Parents: Why is everyone failing? Is it the curriculum, is it our teachers, are the kids overworked, do they just not try, and/or we pushing these kids into math classes too fast?
MCPS Board: Let's not figure this out. No finals or midterms for anyone. Let's make our already inflated grading scale even easier
Parents: Sounds good to us!
Parents do NOT care what their kids learn. They are just like the county. Test scores and grades for college is the only thing that matters
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They didn’t get rid of exams because they were too hard to grade. They got rid of them because too many kids failed them.
Exactly. 60-70% were bombing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear Pyle is all HIGH.
You heard right.
At Pyle all classes use the HIGH curriculum but they have a separate cohort of.kids grouped together who tested into HIGH and do extra activities such as model UN, more DBQs etc
That's not what we heard. They said everyone would do the extra activities like model UN, etc. Where did you hear the stuff about the grouping?
Anonymous wrote:So has everyone heard from their local middle schools about HIGH and AIM? I have a kid at a CES that didn't get into a magnet but has high test scores and should definitely be in HIGH...have heard nothing from her home middle school. Not sure who to contact.