Anonymous wrote:The science is so clear about how handwriting helps the brain learn. Typing does not have anywhere near the same effect. I'm very unhappy with how little my kids are writing by hand. My 4th grader brings home worksheets but they are all just multiple choice questions. I guess they are easier to grade?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Benchmark made things a lot less computer dependent for language arts. They do a tiny bit of work on the computer but it is very limited. Younger grades still do Lexia but older ones don’t unless remediation is required. My children barely use their computers, they don’t even bring them home to charge. I get the screen time reports so I know how much they’re online. Very pleased with this aspect of FCPS.
Not our school. Our teacher has converted the Benchmark questions to a document which she posts on schoology. Kids type their answers.
Anonymous wrote:Benchmark made things a lot less computer dependent for language arts. They do a tiny bit of work on the computer but it is very limited. Younger grades still do Lexia but older ones don’t unless remediation is required. My children barely use their computers, they don’t even bring them home to charge. I get the screen time reports so I know how much they’re online. Very pleased with this aspect of FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS is like any workplace and has good, mediocre and bad employees. It is the luck of the draw. You hope you get a few really good teachers at the right time in your kids education and supplement through tutors or parental assistance during the not so great years.
Other alternative is private. All comes down to financial resources and the environment you want for your child’s education.
My first grader learned a lot in FCPS last year because he had a good and experienced teacher. There was tech use but also plenty of paper and pencil work that came home. This year his teacher is not good, from what I have heard from others and seen so far. Hardly anything has come home and there seems to be a lot more tech use. The other second grade classes are already ahead of my sons’s class, and I fear the gap will widen over the year.
The availability of tech doesn’t inherently make teaching bad, but it seems to enable bad and lazy teaching for those already inclined to be this way. The teacher shortage will make things worse. It’s hard to be a great teacher, but not that hard to be a mediocre to bad one now that there are videos and slides and apps for everything.
Anonymous wrote:My first grader learned a lot in FCPS last year because he had a good and experienced teacher. There was tech use but also plenty of paper and pencil work that came home. This year his teacher is not good, from what I have heard from others and seen so far. Hardly anything has come home and there seems to be a lot more tech use. The other second grade classes are already ahead of my sons’s class, and I fear the gap will widen over the year.
The availability of tech doesn’t inherently make teaching bad, but it seems to enable bad and lazy teaching for those already inclined to be this way. The teacher shortage will make things worse. It’s hard to be a great teacher, but not that hard to be a mediocre to bad one now that there are videos and slides and apps for everything.
Anonymous wrote:We are zoned for a Greatschools 10/10 elementary school in the Langley pyramid. We have not talked to anyone about the schools yet as our kids are young. A neighbor of mine who has a DD in first grade was saying most of the teaching is on screens and the homework is on screens as well. She said it kind of matter-of-factly, not happily. That is not what I want for my child. Do we need to shell out a ton of money we don’t have for private?! Does it vary in other elementary schools.
Anonymous wrote:I remember being super disappointed in first grade- we had switched from private to FCPS and it was like you describe. It has only gotten worse so maybe first grade was one of the better years