Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With so many kids from so many countries and so many ESOL and the FARMS increasing yearly, MCPS needs smaller classrooms. The parochial schools can get away with 25-30 kids because they all are from middle class American families. Most of those kids went to the parochial preschool and know the basics and behaviors of school.
MCPS kindergarten is a complete disaster. 27 kids and 10 of them ESOL. Some kids reading chapter books and others can't even read one word in English. Communication and culture differences. You couldn't pay me enough to teach there and I learned my lesson after sending one there. She learned nothing she hadn't learned in preschool. The curriculum is for the foreigners. Even in 1st grade, they are going over K word wall words. A, Am, Can, Go. I mean let's move on already and teach the kids that need to be taught. Can we not put all the ESOL kids in their own class with smaller ratios until they are fluent?
They are?
I wonder why that is?
They aren't all. My parochial was MOSTLY middle/upper-middle, but always a few kids on a free ride. More importantly though -- have you noticed that parochials that have class sizes like that have more than one teacher for that class? Um, yeah.
How much do parochial-school teachers get paid? How much do teacher aides for parochial schools get paid?
Not much. Less than MCPS. What's your point? That MCPS can't be run like parochial schools? Obviously. Does that mean we should accept these large class sizes? No.
No, actually, my point is that it's a lot cheaper for parochial schools to add teachers/aides than for MCPS to add teachers/aides.
As for accepting the large class sizes -- what are your options? You can take your child out of public school. You can advocate for increases to the MCPS education budget. You can demonstrate in Annapolis for Hogan to restore the GCEI funding. What are you proposing to do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
That's not actually what the studies show. The studies show that the benefits aren't statistically significant going from 25 to 24. It doesn't mean that there aren't benefits.
And, really, why is there always this straw man of "better to have a good teacher with a big class than a bad teacher with a small class"? As if having smaller class sizes means having worse teachers? That's not the choice presented here. Just an attempt to deflect.
It actually does mean exactly that. If something isn't statistically significant (at whatever level of statistical significance you decide to use), that means that it could very well have happened due to random chance.
And empirically, having small class sizes often does mean having worse teachers. If you halve the class sizes, you have to double your teacher workforce. Where will those teachers come from? How many good, unemployed teachers are there out there, available for hire? In fact, this is a possible explanation for the lack of effect of lowered class sizes -- that the positive effect of a smaller class was offset by the negative effect of an unqualified teacher.
Anonymous wrote:
It's this. We are higher population density b/c we build apartments and houses on smaller tracts of land. There's hardly any green space left. Look how Strathmore sold off it's lawn and NIH sold what is now the "Mews." People want to live closer to where they work.
Anonymous wrote:Our elementary school was built just a few years ago and already they are taking away rooms used for specials to convert to classrooms. Why would MCPS not anticipate that people will flock to a new school and thus build in extra classroom space? Seems like terrible planning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The question; why?
The answer… illegal immigration.
There aren't many illegal immigrants on the Western side of MoCo, but some of the class sizes are huge. The population has grown rapidly, but the school district hasn't kept up with the rezoning. The county doesn't help by allowing more multi-family housing to be built in already over crowded school clusters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With so many kids from so many countries and so many ESOL and the FARMS increasing yearly, MCPS needs smaller classrooms. The parochial schools can get away with 25-30 kids because they all are from middle class American families. Most of those kids went to the parochial preschool and know the basics and behaviors of school.
MCPS kindergarten is a complete disaster. 27 kids and 10 of them ESOL. Some kids reading chapter books and others can't even read one word in English. Communication and culture differences. You couldn't pay me enough to teach there and I learned my lesson after sending one there. She learned nothing she hadn't learned in preschool. The curriculum is for the foreigners. Even in 1st grade, they are going over K word wall words. A, Am, Can, Go. I mean let's move on already and teach the kids that need to be taught. Can we not put all the ESOL kids in their own class with smaller ratios until they are fluent?
They are?
I wonder why that is?
They aren't all. My parochial was MOSTLY middle/upper-middle, but always a few kids on a free ride. More importantly though -- have you noticed that parochials that have class sizes like that have more than one teacher for that class? Um, yeah.
How much do parochial-school teachers get paid? How much do teacher aides for parochial schools get paid?
Not much. Less than MCPS. What's your point? That MCPS can't be run like parochial schools? Obviously. Does that mean we should accept these large class sizes? No.
Anonymous wrote:
That's not actually what the studies show. The studies show that the benefits aren't statistically significant going from 25 to 24. It doesn't mean that there aren't benefits.
And, really, why is there always this straw man of "better to have a good teacher with a big class than a bad teacher with a small class"? As if having smaller class sizes means having worse teachers? That's not the choice presented here. Just an attempt to deflect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With so many kids from so many countries and so many ESOL and the FARMS increasing yearly, MCPS needs smaller classrooms. The parochial schools can get away with 25-30 kids because they all are from middle class American families. Most of those kids went to the parochial preschool and know the basics and behaviors of school.
MCPS kindergarten is a complete disaster. 27 kids and 10 of them ESOL. Some kids reading chapter books and others can't even read one word in English. Communication and culture differences. You couldn't pay me enough to teach there and I learned my lesson after sending one there. She learned nothing she hadn't learned in preschool. The curriculum is for the foreigners. Even in 1st grade, they are going over K word wall words. A, Am, Can, Go. I mean let's move on already and teach the kids that need to be taught. Can we not put all the ESOL kids in their own class with smaller ratios until they are fluent?
They are?
I wonder why that is?
They aren't all. My parochial was MOSTLY middle/upper-middle, but always a few kids on a free ride. More importantly though -- have you noticed that parochials that have class sizes like that have more than one teacher for that class? Um, yeah.
How much do parochial-school teachers get paid? How much do teacher aides for parochial schools get paid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With so many kids from so many countries and so many ESOL and the FARMS increasing yearly, MCPS needs smaller classrooms. The parochial schools can get away with 25-30 kids because they all are from middle class American families. Most of those kids went to the parochial preschool and know the basics and behaviors of school.
MCPS kindergarten is a complete disaster. 27 kids and 10 of them ESOL. Some kids reading chapter books and others can't even read one word in English. Communication and culture differences. You couldn't pay me enough to teach there and I learned my lesson after sending one there. She learned nothing she hadn't learned in preschool. The curriculum is for the foreigners. Even in 1st grade, they are going over K word wall words. A, Am, Can, Go. I mean let's move on already and teach the kids that need to be taught. Can we not put all the ESOL kids in their own class with smaller ratios until they are fluent?
They are?
I wonder why that is?
They aren't all. My parochial was MOSTLY middle/upper-middle, but always a few kids on a free ride. More importantly though -- have you noticed that parochials that have class sizes like that have more than one teacher for that class? Um, yeah.
Anonymous wrote:My upper middle class white son was not reading when he entered grade 1..despite years of quality early education, no tv and parents that read to him. Great if your child was but there are kids with no language issues that are still earning to read at 6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With so many kids from so many countries and so many ESOL and the FARMS increasing yearly, MCPS needs smaller classrooms. The parochial schools can get away with 25-30 kids because they all are from middle class American families. Most of those kids went to the parochial preschool and know the basics and behaviors of school.
MCPS kindergarten is a complete disaster. 27 kids and 10 of them ESOL. Some kids reading chapter books and others can't even read one word in English. Communication and culture differences. You couldn't pay me enough to teach there and I learned my lesson after sending one there. She learned nothing she hadn't learned in preschool. The curriculum is for the foreigners. Even in 1st grade, they are going over K word wall words. A, Am, Can, Go. I mean let's move on already and teach the kids that need to be taught. Can we not put all the ESOL kids in their own class with smaller ratios until they are fluent?
They are?
I wonder why that is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom recently sent me an envelope of old photos including my class pictures from 3rd-5th grade. 31 kids each year. This was a middle class school in a small mid-western city and as I recall we all did fine. Why all the handwringing?
Yes, I remember having 33 kids in my third-grade class. This was in a one-class-per-grade school.
There are a lot of studies showing how small class sizes benefit students. Sure, you survived, but that doesn't mean it was good for the students.
Those studies show that the class sizes have to be a whole lot smaller (like under 20). Going from 25 to 24 has no identifiable benefits.
And, as various PPs have said, it's better to have a good teacher in a large class than a bad teacher in a small class.
Anonymous wrote:With so many kids from so many countries and so many ESOL and the FARMS increasing yearly, MCPS needs smaller classrooms. The parochial schools can get away with 25-30 kids because they all are from middle class American families. Most of those kids went to the parochial preschool and know the basics and behaviors of school.
MCPS kindergarten is a complete disaster. 27 kids and 10 of them ESOL. Some kids reading chapter books and others can't even read one word in English. Communication and culture differences. You couldn't pay me enough to teach there and I learned my lesson after sending one there. She learned nothing she hadn't learned in preschool. The curriculum is for the foreigners. Even in 1st grade, they are going over K word wall words. A, Am, Can, Go. I mean let's move on already and teach the kids that need to be taught. Can we not put all the ESOL kids in their own class with smaller ratios until they are fluent?