Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve got a first grader in FCPS, was just talking with DW about how much time our DC will be missing over the next couple of weeks and we realized that she’ll learn a lot more at home with us during that time than she would in school.
Disappointing to hear it doesn’t sound much better in fifth grade. I wish they would focus on academics, not equity at the exclusion of all else.
What are you even talking about? How is "equity" being taught in 1st grade and taking away from academics? Seriously. Give specifics.
DP.
Elementary math in FCPS now follows the lower standards of the “E3” math curriculum. Yes, the “E” is for equity.
Language arts have also been dumbed-down, again, for racial equity reasons. Homework is discouraged because it is seen as racist / not equitable.
FCPS is desperate to “close the racial achievement gap.” The easiest way to do that is to dumb-down the whole curriculum, which is exactly what FCPS is doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was talking with a few other parents and they were complaining about how FCPS’s new curriculum has been dumbed down and how their 5th grader hasn’t even written any papers yet and are doing very rudimentary work. Has this been your experience as well?
I can speak to high school in FCPS. Yes, FCPS has dumbed-down the education provided in the county. Specifically, our school board is behind this change.
The majority of our school board, and particularly the chair, follow an ideology which Kamala Harris publicly spoke of several times in speeches and interviews; the “woke” ideology. Google it.
Another poster described it so well:
“ Or in our schools, the woke idea that gifted and talented classes aren’t fair and we should lump remedial learners with advanced learners, thus forcing teachers to teach to the common denominator. This sort of woke thinking makes the entire nation dumber. I know it feels good and whatever, but do you want an engineer who was just scooted by and pushed up to the next grade and is less qualified because we have water down academic vigor? Because we eliminated neutral testing for entry to rigorous schools? No dude. That’s how you get Boeing 737 type planes everywhere.
I’m a pro-choice liberal who voted for Harris and who lives in SE DC the way. I live in a nice row house and I drive a cargo bike and do all the normal urban city sht every other parent here does, but I’m sick of the idiocy and woke policies with crime and school. It’s fking up our world standing, competitiveness and domestic safety.”
I am a parent and I live here in Fairfax with my partner and two children, but I agree completely with the D.C. voter / DCUM parent who wrote the above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve got a first grader in FCPS, was just talking with DW about how much time our DC will be missing over the next couple of weeks and we realized that she’ll learn a lot more at home with us during that time than she would in school.
Disappointing to hear it doesn’t sound much better in fifth grade. I wish they would focus on academics, not equity at the exclusion of all else.
What are you even talking about? How is "equity" being taught in 1st grade and taking away from academics? Seriously. Give specifics.
DP.
Elementary math in FCPS now follows the lower standards of the “E3” math curriculum. Yes, the “E” is for equity.
Language arts have also been dumbed-down, again, for racial equity reasons. Homework is discouraged because it is seen as racist / not equitable.
FCPS is desperate to “close the racial achievement gap.” The easiest way to do that is to dumb-down the whole curriculum, which is exactly what FCPS is doing.
Anonymous wrote:Was talking with a few other parents and they were complaining about how FCPS’s new curriculum has been dumbed down and how their 5th grader hasn’t even written any papers yet and are doing very rudimentary work. Has this been your experience as well?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve got a first grader in FCPS, was just talking with DW about how much time our DC will be missing over the next couple of weeks and we realized that she’ll learn a lot more at home with us during that time than she would in school.
Disappointing to hear it doesn’t sound much better in fifth grade. I wish they would focus on academics, not equity at the exclusion of all else.
What are you even talking about? How is "equity" being taught in 1st grade and taking away from academics? Seriously. Give specifics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve got a first grader in FCPS, was just talking with DW about how much time our DC will be missing over the next couple of weeks and we realized that she’ll learn a lot more at home with us during that time than she would in school.
Disappointing to hear it doesn’t sound much better in fifth grade. I wish they would focus on academics, not equity at the exclusion of all else.
What are you even talking about? How is "equity" being taught in 1st grade and taking away from academics? Seriously. Give specifics.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve got a first grader in FCPS, was just talking with DW about how much time our DC will be missing over the next couple of weeks and we realized that she’ll learn a lot more at home with us during that time than she would in school.
Disappointing to hear it doesn’t sound much better in fifth grade. I wish they would focus on academics, not equity at the exclusion of all else.
Anonymous wrote:It's not any better in high school. No papers so far and very little to no homework. Teachers want work done in class - to avoid cheating? to address equity issues? I don't know. Most expect a paragraph to a couple of sentences for written work. So far it doesn't seem rigorous at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach AAP and the kids hate it. So boring and disjointed!
I also teach AAP and my kids also hate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach AAP and the kids hate it. So boring and disjointed!
Nice try, we know you're corn mom.
Anonymous wrote:No essays in 7th grade so far. Anybody else have a similar grade 7?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. What happened to writing?Anonymous wrote:7th graders have not been writing anything.
My 6th grader just completed her 2nd essay of the year.