Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will MCPS still be able to build all the new schools they need? I hope the new Chevy Chase middle school in Kensington won't be delayed.
No. MCPS was already not able to build all the new schools they need.
I read in the Post that Hogan plans to slash funding from the state for school capital projects in Moco and PG. B-CC HS desperately needs its addition also! No one in a million years would allow B-CC neighborhoods to be redistricted further north and east.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will MCPS still be able to build all the new schools they need? I hope the new Chevy Chase middle school in Kensington won't be delayed.
No. MCPS was already not able to build all the new schools they need.
Anonymous wrote:Will MCPS still be able to build all the new schools they need? I hope the new Chevy Chase middle school in Kensington won't be delayed.
Anonymous wrote:Class sizes will grow if there's a hiring freeze because many teachers will retire, have a baby and not return to work, get sick, etc. Principals are given a budget and they essentially decide how to spend it, so they have control over class size to an extent.
Anonymous wrote:I hope that Larry Hogan cuts out the bloat. He strikes me as a no BS guy.
If teachers are not laid off then why will class sizes grow?
Anonymous wrote:If teachers are not laid off then why will class sizes grow?
Anonymous wrote:Oh, don't get me started. Wait, it has happened.
We are in the financial hole we are in because O'Malley was too busy mugging for the cameras in an attempt to get the 2016 Democratic nomination for president than to tend to Maryland. The representatives in Annapolis are too busy admiring their self-importance than to realize that the budget has been running at a deficit. Hogan is taking on a tough problem, and it is just too bad none of us like how he trying to solve it.
As for MCPS, it is a bloated bureaucracy in which students are merely widgets. The students do not come first. I don't even think the teachers do anymore. The school system has taken on a life of its own driven by the central office. Hell, the start time problem is all driven by the counties inability to actually meet all of the needs of the children because they so heavily rely on busses rather than neighborhood schools. Starr doesn't care, since this is merely a stepping stone. NY Times in December noted the reason Start didn't get the NYC job is because Arne Duncan scuttled it over Starr's opinion on testing for common core. I actually think Starr was right on this one, but the evidence is he is on to bigger and better things than MCPS. So, just like O'Malley, he is leaving others to mind the store.
Maybe hard budget cuts will cut some of the MCPS bureaucracy.
Anonymous wrote:You've never seen staff put back in the classroom in the last twenty years??? Happens all the time. Same with resource teachers and other non-classroom teachers who work in schools. They'll do whatever it takes to prevent laying folks off when budgets are cut and numbers (of students) shift.
Getting back to the point: teachers and administrators will not be laid off. Class sizes will likely increase instead.