Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So let me get this straight: the top district in the Nation (MCPS) sticks with a Curriculum (2.0) they developed with a multinational corporation (Pearson) for nearly a decade with failing results until they pay half a million to the top education research lab in the Nation (Johns Hopkins) finally tells them quit it! Does this sound like something one of the top school districts in the Nation would even ponder?
It kinda does, though. Most of the school districts in the US wouldn't develop a curriculum. They'd just use whatever outdated crap their state board authorized however many years ago. I didn't like 2.0 either, but there's nothing wrong or surprising about a large system like MCPS attempting to develop its own curriculum.
I disagree.
As you said, most school systems (including large ones) would not develop their own curriculum. They go with published materials which have been developed by subject matter experts, generally reviewed by many other subject matter experts and professionally edited. It is surprising that a small department whose primary expertise was pedagogical thought that acting on an ad hoc basis, they could do better. While a published textbook may be more out of date than a notebook binder given to the teacher a few days before the quarter she’s supposed to start teaching it, this does not seem particularly advantageous to me. It was wrong that in its hubris, MCPS decided to operate more as a private company with a profit/prestige motive, using our kids as guinea pigs, than as a public service that should prioritize educating children according to proven best practices.
You may well be one of the many that feels the MCPS curriculum was fine based on your children’s personal experiences. If so, I am genuinely pleased for you. However, I’m convinced that such are experiences are due to teachers who recognized the curriculum deficiencies and compensated for them independently. I base my experiences on the time I spent serving on a curriculum committee, reading the curriculum at central office before it went online with 2.0, becoming completely inaccessible, and talking to teachers, asking very specific questions. An independent audit concluded that the MCPS curriculum was objectively bad. This is not just whining from a few privileged malcontents.
Incidentally, in line with OP’s historical observations on GT education in MCPS, 15 years ago when my DC was in an HGC, the teacher, who sent her own daughter to a private school, used that private school’s grammar curriculum to teach her MCPS GT class.
Amen.
Who's "proven best practices"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So let me get this straight: the top district in the Nation (MCPS) sticks with a Curriculum (2.0) they developed with a multinational corporation (Pearson) for nearly a decade with failing results until they pay half a million to the top education research lab in the Nation (Johns Hopkins) finally tells them quit it! Does this sound like something one of the top school districts in the Nation would even ponder?
It kinda does, though. Most of the school districts in the US wouldn't develop a curriculum. They'd just use whatever outdated crap their state board authorized however many years ago. I didn't like 2.0 either, but there's nothing wrong or surprising about a large system like MCPS attempting to develop its own curriculum.
I disagree.
As you said, most school systems (including large ones) would not develop their own curriculum. They go with published materials which have been developed by subject matter experts, generally reviewed by many other subject matter experts and professionally edited. It is surprising that a small department whose primary expertise was pedagogical thought that acting on an ad hoc basis, they could do better. While a published textbook may be more out of date than a notebook binder given to the teacher a few days before the quarter she’s supposed to start teaching it, this does not seem particularly advantageous to me. It was wrong that in its hubris, MCPS decided to operate more as a private company with a profit/prestige motive, using our kids as guinea pigs, than as a public service that should prioritize educating children according to proven best practices.
You may well be one of the many that feels the MCPS curriculum was fine based on your children’s personal experiences. If so, I am genuinely pleased for you. However, I’m convinced that such are experiences are due to teachers who recognized the curriculum deficiencies and compensated for them independently. I base my experiences on the time I spent serving on a curriculum committee, reading the curriculum at central office before it went online with 2.0, becoming completely inaccessible, and talking to teachers, asking very specific questions. An independent audit concluded that the MCPS curriculum was objectively bad. This is not just whining from a few privileged malcontents.
Incidentally, in line with OP’s historical observations on GT education in MCPS, 15 years ago when my DC was in an HGC, the teacher, who sent her own daughter to a private school, used that private school’s grammar curriculum to teach her MCPS GT class.
Amen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So let me get this straight: the top district in the Nation (MCPS) sticks with a Curriculum (2.0) they developed with a multinational corporation (Pearson) for nearly a decade with failing results until they pay half a million to the top education research lab in the Nation (Johns Hopkins) finally tells them quit it! Does this sound like something one of the top school districts in the Nation would even ponder?
It kinda does, though. Most of the school districts in the US wouldn't develop a curriculum. They'd just use whatever outdated crap their state board authorized however many years ago. I didn't like 2.0 either, but there's nothing wrong or surprising about a large system like MCPS attempting to develop its own curriculum.
I disagree.
As you said, most school systems (including large ones) would not develop their own curriculum. They go with published materials which have been developed by subject matter experts, generally reviewed by many other subject matter experts and professionally edited. It is surprising that a small department whose primary expertise was pedagogical thought that acting on an ad hoc basis, they could do better. While a published textbook may be more out of date than a notebook binder given to the teacher a few days before the quarter she’s supposed to start teaching it, this does not seem particularly advantageous to me. It was wrong that in its hubris, MCPS decided to operate more as a private company with a profit/prestige motive, using our kids as guinea pigs, than as a public service that should prioritize educating children according to proven best practices.
You may well be one of the many that feels the MCPS curriculum was fine based on your children’s personal experiences. If so, I am genuinely pleased for you. However, I’m convinced that such are experiences are due to teachers who recognized the curriculum deficiencies and compensated for them independently. I base my experiences on the time I spent serving on a curriculum committee, reading the curriculum at central office before it went online with 2.0, becoming completely inaccessible, and talking to teachers, asking very specific questions. An independent audit concluded that the MCPS curriculum was objectively bad. This is not just whining from a few privileged malcontents.
Incidentally, in line with OP’s historical observations on GT education in MCPS, 15 years ago when my DC was in an HGC, the teacher, who sent her own daughter to a private school, used that private school’s grammar curriculum to teach her MCPS GT class.