Anonymous wrote:Administrators are always going to rationalize what’s easiest and cheapest, and that means shoving all kinds of kids with different levels and needs into one classroom and making it seem like an ideological and pedagogical strategy rather than the complete absence of one. Personally, I lament the loss of tracking. Advanced students are being cheated.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, if you get your kid's HS schedule and they are in a "regular" class with two teachers assigned--switch them to honors. Better to get a C in honors then learn nothing all year. I had to hire a summer tutor to basically teach my kid Algebra 2 after a completely wasted year.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, if you get your kid's HS schedule and they are in a "regular" class with two teachers assigned--switch them to honors. Better to get a C in honors then learn nothing all year. I had to hire a summer tutor to basically teach my kid Algebra 2 after a completely wasted year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think FCPS is actually trending in the other direction in my experience.
Ad hoc, separate small classes (approx 5 kids) have been amazing for my high schooler with an IEP this year. He’s a great kid who has zero behavior issues.
The model last year was to have regular classes with an aide or special education teacher in the room. It was a complete waste of time for the my kid and he barely passed his core subjects.
This year, they are taking that same staff member (that’s being paid irregardless, so let’s use them!) pulling the IEP kids out of the room and doing most of the teaching in a very small group. Nothing has changed with my child’s IEP hours and I think it’s technically supposed to still be an inclusion class. But no one is complaining and the kids are actually learning.
My kid loves the classes that are run like this.
If you think the school is breaking even on cost then you don’t know much.
So, are they doing this instead of the "team teaching" that has been done in the past. My DS who was in a team taught GenEd science class decided to do Honors the next year because the students were so disruptive. And, my DS was not expecially "into" school.
Anonymous wrote:For any parent whose child has an IEP- please remember that the service hours and location of hours CANNOT be changed without your consent. The IEP is a legal document. At your next IEP meeting, if they want to change some hours from the special education setting to the general education setting you can agree or disagree. If that’s the only part of the IEP you disagree with, then you can sign a “partial agreement “
Anonymous wrote:It’s not nonsense, it’s due to lack of special ed teachers available to meet the much increased numbers of students with IEPs. Students with violent behaviors has increased and so teachers willing to put their bodies at risk for these students are becoming fewer and fewer. So each school has 1-2 special education teachers each with a demanding caseload and tons of IEP meetings and not enough time to teach.
To expect public school to meet the needs of every single student at every single level is what is nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS is moving toward fully inclusive classrooms with fewer breakouts, putting special ed (including significant autism), non-English speakers, kids needing speech/OT, grade-level students, and advanced kids all in the same room.
How is one teacher supposed to meet all those needs at once? Doesn’t this just spread services thinner?
Feels like they have yet again fallen victim to nonsense.
This is false. Kids are pulled in and out all day long in my school for all different needs.
Moving towards. This is what they have been increasing and doing. This is the future direction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS is moving toward fully inclusive classrooms with fewer breakouts, putting special ed (including significant autism), non-English speakers, kids needing speech/OT, grade-level students, and advanced kids all in the same room.
How is one teacher supposed to meet all those needs at once? Doesn’t this just spread services thinner?
Feels like they have yet again fallen victim to nonsense.
This is false. Kids are pulled in and out all day long in my school for all different needs.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS is moving toward fully inclusive classrooms with fewer breakouts, putting special ed (including significant autism), non-English speakers, kids needing speech/OT, grade-level students, and advanced kids all in the same room.
How is one teacher supposed to meet all those needs at once? Doesn’t this just spread services thinner?
Feels like they have yet again fallen victim to nonsense.