Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Calling bullsh@! on you being a teacher OP. If you were, you’d know that children are not the most reliable narrators. You’d also know how to go about getting a better sense from the teacher themselves.
All that said, I see teachers relying on videos for read alouds more frequently now than a few years ago. I think part of it is due to resources they developed during virtual instruction and hard copies of books not being available (in classroom/school library) so it’s easier to find a video then look for an alternative title that fits their need.
Again, if you were a classroom teacher I think you’d understand this.
—elementary teacher
This seems like a ridiculous reason/excuse to not read to the kids.
+1. Schools won't buy teacher's books for read-alouds? GTFO. Let a parent know. Those books will find their way into a classroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like we got a lot of kindergarten experts here! Maybe you should apply to MCPS because you're so knowledgeable!
Believe it or not, many parents are also informed about children and their needs! We watch them the other 70 percent of the time.
Lol, I'm not a teacher, I'm a parent and I can definitely tell you most of the parents in this county rely on the schools to raise their children. Maybe try reading to your kids yourself. I know...you'd actually have to do your job as a parent-I know, it's a crazy idea!
So we should accept bad school policies because we are all bad parents and deserve bad things, got it.
Of course parents can and should read to their children, but that doesn’t magically fix the school environment.
You all sound like insane maniacs. You’re losing your minds because once in awhile a YouTube video is played of a read aloud while meanwhile the kids are being read aloud to on a daily basis from their teacher. Like…. You refuse to accept it can happen both ways. (Not even both ways bc 99.9 percent of the time students are read aloud to in person and the tiny, remaining percentage is on YouTube. Once every 3 months) unhinged. It’s unreal, honestly. If I WAS a teacher, I would have left MCPS a loooong time ago because of parents like this. Most other districts have sane parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love that they're starting in K with digital literacy. Screen time is essential for building the skills of tomorrow.
nobody born after 2000 will have a problem with digital literacy. No additional exposure is needed.
Just want to point out that kids are extremely good at using computers for entertainment but most of them do not know how to use computers as learning tools which is why you need to explicitly teach typing and how to use different software.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love that they're starting in K with digital literacy. Screen time is essential for building the skills of tomorrow.
nobody born after 2000 will have a problem with digital literacy. No additional exposure is needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like we got a lot of kindergarten experts here! Maybe you should apply to MCPS because you're so knowledgeable!
Believe it or not, many parents are also informed about children and their needs! We watch them the other 70 percent of the time.
Lol, I'm not a teacher, I'm a parent and I can definitely tell you most of the parents in this county rely on the schools to raise their children. Maybe try reading to your kids yourself. I know...you'd actually have to do your job as a parent-I know, it's a crazy idea!
So we should accept bad school policies because we are all bad parents and deserve bad things, got it.
Of course parents can and should read to their children, but that doesn’t magically fix the school environment.
You all sound like insane maniacs. You’re losing your minds because once in awhile a YouTube video is played of a read aloud while meanwhile the kids are being read aloud to on a daily basis from their teacher. Like…. You refuse to accept it can happen both ways. (Not even both ways bc 99.9 percent of the time students are read aloud to in person and the tiny, remaining percentage is on YouTube. Once every 3 months) unhinged. It’s unreal, honestly. If I WAS a teacher, I would have left MCPS a loooong time ago because of parents like this. Most other districts have sane parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like we got a lot of kindergarten experts here! Maybe you should apply to MCPS because you're so knowledgeable!
Believe it or not, many parents are also informed about children and their needs! We watch them the other 70 percent of the time.
Lol, I'm not a teacher, I'm a parent and I can definitely tell you most of the parents in this county rely on the schools to raise their children. Maybe try reading to your kids yourself. I know...you'd actually have to do your job as a parent-I know, it's a crazy idea!
So we should accept bad school policies because we are all bad parents and deserve bad things, got it.
Of course parents can and should read to their children, but that doesn’t magically fix the school environment.
You all sound like insane maniacs. You’re losing your minds because once in awhile a YouTube video is played of a read aloud while meanwhile the kids are being read aloud to on a daily basis from their teacher. Like…. You refuse to accept it can happen both ways. (Not even both ways bc 99.9 percent of the time students are read aloud to in person and the tiny, remaining percentage is on YouTube. Once every 3 months) unhinged. It’s unreal, honestly. If I WAS a teacher, I would have left MCPS a loooong time ago because of parents like this. Most other districts have sane parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like we got a lot of kindergarten experts here! Maybe you should apply to MCPS because you're so knowledgeable!
Believe it or not, many parents are also informed about children and their needs! We watch them the other 70 percent of the time.
Lol, I'm not a teacher, I'm a parent and I can definitely tell you most of the parents in this county rely on the schools to raise their children. Maybe try reading to your kids yourself. I know...you'd actually have to do your job as a parent-I know, it's a crazy idea!
So we should accept bad school policies because we are all bad parents and deserve bad things, got it.
Of course parents can and should read to their children, but that doesn’t magically fix the school environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Calling bullsh@! on you being a teacher OP. If you were, you’d know that children are not the most reliable narrators. You’d also know how to go about getting a better sense from the teacher themselves.
All that said, I see teachers relying on videos for read alouds more frequently now than a few years ago. I think part of it is due to resources they developed during virtual instruction and hard copies of books not being available (in classroom/school library) so it’s easier to find a video then look for an alternative title that fits their need.
Again, if you were a classroom teacher I think you’d understand this.
—elementary teacher
This seems like a ridiculous reason/excuse to not read to the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looks like we got a lot of kindergarten experts here! Maybe you should apply to MCPS because you're so knowledgeable!
Believe it or not, many parents are also informed about children and their needs! We watch them the other 70 percent of the time.
Lol, I'm not a teacher, I'm a parent and I can definitely tell you most of the parents in this county rely on the schools to raise their children. Maybe try reading to your kids yourself. I know...you'd actually have to do your job as a parent-I know, it's a crazy idea!
Anonymous wrote:I love that they're starting in K with digital literacy. Screen time is essential for building the skills of tomorrow.
Anonymous wrote:Looks like we got a lot of kindergarten experts here! Maybe you should apply to MCPS because you're so knowledgeable!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love Obama but this is the worst part of his legacy. The idea that technology strengthens the school experience. Even if 10% of the time it is useful, what a huge loss overall. So many missed interpersonal connections, so many missed *neural* connections when paper, pencil and hand are pushed to the side. So much habituation to instant gratification. We are creating a generation of screen addicts with poor eyesight and no patience.
To those of you advocating for a readaloud on screen, do you not get what’s missing? The physical closeness of the teacher surrounded by a semicircle of kids. Getting to know and love your teacher’s reading voice. Kids jockeying to see better, strengthening their negotiating and self advocacy skills—and their eyesight. The reverence for a tangible product rather than a screen. Teacher slowing down to answer questions with no glitches or blue light. Also, kids benefit from repeating the same books and daily chapters from a long book.
Well said.
Especially in the younger grades. Kids in K and 1st grade would be happy to play games or do puzzles or color or play with LEGOs during indoor recess. But it’s easier and quieter to throw on a video, so that’s what happens.