Anonymous wrote:So instead of asking for evidence from a stranger on an anonymous forum, I think you need to do some studying up on your fav school district.
How about before posting on a forum you include evidence to strengthen your point! At least in the article they mention that honors (the majority of kids) are doing fine and we can assume the AP kids are doing fine so again it is the struggling students who are struggling. I am Ok with that actually.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, my kid who got straight A's in both quarters of Algebra isn't wasting any time studying for a semester final which will neither go on her transcript nor affect her semester grade, which WILL go on her transcript. She doesn't care one whit if she gets an E, and if she does so, it doesn't mean she cheated to get her As. She is spending the time she saved NOT studying for algebra and instead studying for her French semester final in order to pull her A/B quarter grades to an A for the semester, which she can only do by getting an A on the final. This is as it should be - why should she have to prove twice that she knows the Algebra material?
I am more worried about the kids who get Cs or below on Algebra quarter grades - MCPS instruction is not working for those kids and they have motivation to study for a final because they are clueless in the class.
Anonymous wrote:Evidence that kids are failing the exams in every subject?
Both of my kids have said the math exams include information not covered in class..
Anonymous wrote:You can't consider the fact that it is not a good test? Why are you so confident in the test and so sure that the teaching/curriculum is the problem??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/one-of-nations-largest-school-districts-ditches-high-school-final-exams/2015/09/08/49cf5810-561e-11e5-b8c9-944725fcd3b9_story.html
I totally understand. This is institutionalized cheating. I mean, how else can you explain how students who "earn" straight A's in the quarters, fail Math semester exams - even when the bar is so low?
This will help kids at both ends of the spectrum - the entitled kids who are used to grade inflation and those kids who can never bridge the achievement gap.
So, what does it mean for those who have worked hard at school? 1600 on the new SAT? And 18 APs each? Maybe SAT will become most important? Perhaps it will include Calculus now? One can only hope.
Some kids psych themselves out so much that they bomb the tests. DD is a solid student but terrible test taker. We should not be judged on our ability to perform liked trained seals in a circus act just to prove we know that material.
And I am curious what makes you think that those who bomb the test HAVE NOT been working hard for the whole year.
Anonymous wrote:It was only 60% of HSers last year..the second year of a new test and new curriculum for lower performing students. If 99% of these same students got A's next year would we assume that the teachers did a fantastic job? Or would we say that MCPS made an easier test and the curriculum was dumbed down?
Anonymous wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/one-of-nations-largest-school-districts-ditches-high-school-final-exams/2015/09/08/49cf5810-561e-11e5-b8c9-944725fcd3b9_story.html
I totally understand. This is institutionalized cheating. I mean, how else can you explain how students who "earn" straight A's in the quarters, fail Math semester exams - even when the bar is so low?
This will help kids at both ends of the spectrum - the entitled kids who are used to grade inflation and those kids who can never bridge the achievement gap.
So, what does it mean for those who have worked hard at school? 1600 on the new SAT? And 18 APs each? Maybe SAT will become most important? Perhaps it will include Calculus now? One can only hope.
Anonymous wrote:It was only 60% of HSers last year..the second year of a new test and new curriculum for lower performing students. If 99% of these same students got A's next year would we assume that the teachers did a fantastic job? Or would we say that MCPS made an easier test and the curriculum was dumbed down?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I read the article. If you think 75% pass rate (not an A but just a passing grade) is good for honors algebra 2 - good for you. I do not.
And please stop with the rationalization that those kids taking Algebra 1 in high school are remedial. The normal track is to take Algebra 1 in 9th grade. Advanced is 7/8th. And we all know the "advanced" kids have parents at home helping, tutors, math camps etc... to let MCPS teachers off the hook on their crappy teaching.
Algebra I in 9th grade was the official grade-level track before Curriculum 2.0, but as far as I know, the majority of students were taking Algebra I before 9th grade. (Now, of course, the grade-level track is Algebra I in 8th grade.)
And the majority of students did not have tutors, math camps, etc.
So you are sticking with all kids who take Algebra in 9th are remedial kids and that is why over 75% of them can't even pass a test on a course they took all year? That it has nothing to do with the teachers? Okay - got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I read the article. If you think 75% pass rate (not an A but just a passing grade) is good for honors algebra 2 - good for you. I do not.
And please stop with the rationalization that those kids taking Algebra 1 in high school are remedial. The normal track is to take Algebra 1 in 9th grade. Advanced is 7/8th. And we all know the "advanced" kids have parents at home helping, tutors, math camps etc... to let MCPS teachers off the hook on their crappy teaching.
Algebra I in 9th grade was the official grade-level track before Curriculum 2.0, but as far as I know, the majority of students were taking Algebra I before 9th grade. (Now, of course, the grade-level track is Algebra I in 8th grade.)
And the majority of students did not have tutors, math camps, etc.
Anonymous wrote:
I read the article. If you think 75% pass rate (not an A but just a passing grade) is good for honors algebra 2 - good for you. I do not.
And please stop with the rationalization that those kids taking Algebra 1 in high school are remedial. The normal track is to take Algebra 1 in 9th grade. Advanced is 7/8th. And we all know the "advanced" kids have parents at home helping, tutors, math camps etc... to let MCPS teachers off the hook on their crappy teaching.