Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So curious where you think is better.
My neice attends a public charter school in AZ and it is amazing! Excellent academics and not nearly the level of behavioral issues we have at my kids’ public MCPS HS.
And yet most of these are just scams that can do well because they aren't required to educate all children just the ones that are easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved to Montgomery County because of the schools, and now, we are moving out for the exact same reason. MCPS has been deteriorating on so many levels over the last decade. It feels like watching a car wreck in slow motion. Our kids deserve better.
Good riddance. It's people like you who expect the school system to raise your kids are the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Bye bye bye
No problem leave sooner rather than later.
Darling nephew acceptances from an MCPS school. He will be following his first cousins, who also graduated from MCPS in recent years and were accepted of by many schools like the ones below.
Stanford, MIT, CMU, Yale, UMD, UVA, UNC,
MCPS rocks.
Please take all the book banners, Mandel & Diaz supporters of Moms4Liberty with you.
And all the nut jobs who sued. the county and lost the OPT Out that was glorious.
Keep the idiots out of our public schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again it’s a gigantic school district. Quality differs by school and program.
This.
Also, it’s still a solid choice for this region unless you want to move to Howard County.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been a big McPS defender and have two in the system with one graduated now. And I’m starting to feel very worried. The curriculum issues for 4-8 have been troubling (shifting math curriculum, basically no MS English curriculum). The teachers are demoralized and while some are still incredibly fabulous, it seems like every year my kids’ favorite teachers retire or quit. A lot of the other teachers are just starting to see burned out and don’t grade things until end of quarter, don’t give any feedback, tell kids to figure it out if they have questions. These are MS and HS teachers — our ES teachers were all basically great. And it’s a minority that are bad but it’s really hard — if you have a math teacher that has given up, it’s hard to miss a full year. Or if you never have a good science teacher through bad luck of the draw, it’s hard to be excited about science.
And I am upset about the bathrooms and things like the broken hvac. To have kids and teachers sweating in 90 degree classroom with no bathrooms available…..just doesn’t seem right. Even my public school in a state people would consider craptastic had bathrooms!
I have siblings in smalll town Massachusetts and their schools seem really great. Same with friends in New Hampshire. The county system here is skmewhat challenging.
Anonymous wrote:21:56, it is a D-I-Y model this MCPS one. You will have at least two jobs during your kid's time in this system, one as a teacher and the other whatever you trained to be educated in/do in your life before the +/-20years before you became a parent.
Anonymous wrote:Again it’s a gigantic school district. Quality differs by school and program.
Anonymous wrote:Hmm. My daughter is heading into her senior year and my son graduated last year. I don’t really have any significant complaints. What’s so bad about MCPS?
Anonymous wrote:Bye bye bye
No problem leave sooner rather than later.
Darling nephew acceptances from an MCPS school. He will be following his first cousins, who also graduated from MCPS in recent years and were accepted of by many schools like the ones below.
Stanford, MIT, CMU, Yale, UMD, UVA, UNC,
MCPS rocks.
Please take all the book banners, Mandel & Diaz supporters of Moms4Liberty with you.
And all the nut jobs who sued. the county and lost the OPT Out that was glorious.
Keep the idiots out of our public schools.
Anonymous wrote:Grew up in PG in the 80s/90s and MCPS was basically the jewel in the Maryland public school crown but oh have the mighty have fallen. Howard and AA are far better now and MCPS just seems to be struggling with how to handle it’s diverse needs and in a tight budgetary environment. Yes, compared to other less affluent counties across the country it shines bright but for those who have seen it evolve over time, it’s fallen from its former pedestal.