Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. My kid doesn't go to one of those schools, pp. He goes to a fairly desirable ms with much less racial or socioeconomic diversity. It's a yuppie school. And while some rave about how great it is, I think it's mediocre at best.
And to answer another question: no, the grades aren't a mistake. I checked. And it's not like it's just one class--it's all the classes. There's a very low bar to get an A.
Thanks, someone else did say this is how it is in the fancy pants part of the county but should that make me feel better. In my experience MS expectations are generally lower than ES. Yes, there's the juggling classes which some kids can't handle but the actual work, is too easy.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. My kid doesn't go to one of those schools, pp. He goes to a fairly desirable ms with much less racial or socioeconomic diversity. It's a yuppie school. And while some rave about how great it is, I think it's mediocre at best.
And to answer another question: no, the grades aren't a mistake. I checked. And it's not like it's just one class--it's all the classes. There's a very low bar to get an A.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. My kid doesn't go to one of those schools, pp. He goes to a fairly desirable ms with much less racial or socioeconomic diversity. It's a yuppie school. And while some rave about how great it is, I think it's mediocre at best.
And to answer another question: no, the grades aren't a mistake. I checked. And it's not like it's just one class--it's all the classes. There's a very low bar to get an A.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sad that they have dumbed down the education in MCPS. It used to be a great school district.
I'm a teacher in MCPS. The dumbing down has occurred in response to rampant parent pressure to crank out those As at all costs. My older child was able to get an excellent education in this system, but we felt we had to put the younger one in private school.
Thanks for the insight. Again, it's sad that parents think an A is all that matters. These kids are going to struggle when they get to college.
They'll struggle when they get to HS, too, my experience is expectations pick up significantly.
I witnessed exactly this when a teacher went out on long term leave. The sub started actually grading the kids on the material they should have been learning and a cabal of parents and students had her replaced in no time and the admin arbitrarily added a 10% bump to everyone's grade.
Ugh. That's horrible PP.
My DS never struggled in school but was never really a completely straight A student either (usually all As and a B...). In 6th grade, he pulled down straight As with barely a nod to homework. I didn't understand it. Now, in 7th, he's getting his butt kicked. It's as though they pushed the kids through 6th to make the transition to MS easier and, now, the ones in higher level classes (advanced or honors) are really getting nailed. I hear parents yelling about grades constantly now where last year they were bragging about their childrens' intelligence.
Frankly, I'm glad DS is facing some rigor prior to high school. We were seriously considering going to private but if the rigor keeps up, we'll reassess.
Interesting that you mention honors and advanced courses. In our MCPS middle school, there are no honors classes and all classes are taught at the "advanced" level. I wonder if the "advanced" part of the class is being dumbed down since now all kids have to take the advanced class.
I'm the teacher who posted above. The "advanced" part of the course refers to a set of specific skills not normally taught in the course. It isn't intended for only gifted and talented students. With scaffolding all students should be able to perform those skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sad that they have dumbed down the education in MCPS. It used to be a great school district.
I'm a teacher in MCPS. The dumbing down has occurred in response to rampant parent pressure to crank out those As at all costs. My older child was able to get an excellent education in this system, but we felt we had to put the younger one in private school.
Thanks for the insight. Again, it's sad that parents think an A is all that matters. These kids are going to struggle when they get to college.
They'll struggle when they get to HS, too, my experience is expectations pick up significantly.
I witnessed exactly this when a teacher went out on long term leave. The sub started actually grading the kids on the material they should have been learning and a cabal of parents and students had her replaced in no time and the admin arbitrarily added a 10% bump to everyone's grade.
Ugh. That's horrible PP.
My DS never struggled in school but was never really a completely straight A student either (usually all As and a B...). In 6th grade, he pulled down straight As with barely a nod to homework. I didn't understand it. Now, in 7th, he's getting his butt kicked. It's as though they pushed the kids through 6th to make the transition to MS easier and, now, the ones in higher level classes (advanced or honors) are really getting nailed. I hear parents yelling about grades constantly now where last year they were bragging about their childrens' intelligence.
Frankly, I'm glad DS is facing some rigor prior to high school. We were seriously considering going to private but if the rigor keeps up, we'll reassess.
Interesting that you mention honors and advanced courses. In our MCPS middle school, there are no honors classes and all classes are taught at the "advanced" level. I wonder if the "advanced" part of the class is being dumbed down since now all kids have to take the advanced class.
Anonymous wrote:This whole story is ridiculous. I'm really curious what MS is being referred to in the post. This is certainly not happening at my child's MS. He's working for his grades and paying the consequences if he doesn't. Yes, some of his friends may be getting straight A's, but it's not because they are inflating the grades. I know plenty of other kids who aren't getting close to straight A's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the PP who asked about Edline on page 1. Fwiw, my 6th grader is having a very different experience - he got a slew of really lousy grades even in classes where he normally has done well. For him it has been a huge shock to go from the land of Ps and Is to the number/letter grades of middle school. He's seen the direct consequence of forgetting to put name on a paper or sloppy writing. Stuff that would have easily been a P in 5th grade has been graded at a C or worse. Edline was crucial for us in helping him to understand the consequences of all these little sloppy mistakes. He managed to pull his final term grades up to Bs, but only with a decent amount of effort.
I do see a lot of effort in our MCPS school to give kids second chances and other opportunities to raise their grades, so I get the grade inflation sense. (Which is hardly unique to MCPS - I teach at a university and you wouldn't believe the grade inflation in that environment.) But at least in terms of initial work and expectations for 6th grade MCPS, my kid is getting a fairly rigorous grading experience.
That is the fault of MCPS who took away letter grades form 3-5th grade. Terrible
Anonymous wrote:I'm the PP who asked about Edline on page 1. Fwiw, my 6th grader is having a very different experience - he got a slew of really lousy grades even in classes where he normally has done well. For him it has been a huge shock to go from the land of Ps and Is to the number/letter grades of middle school. He's seen the direct consequence of forgetting to put name on a paper or sloppy writing. Stuff that would have easily been a P in 5th grade has been graded at a C or worse. Edline was crucial for us in helping him to understand the consequences of all these little sloppy mistakes. He managed to pull his final term grades up to Bs, but only with a decent amount of effort.
I do see a lot of effort in our MCPS school to give kids second chances and other opportunities to raise their grades, so I get the grade inflation sense. (Which is hardly unique to MCPS - I teach at a university and you wouldn't believe the grade inflation in that environment.) But at least in terms of initial work and expectations for 6th grade MCPS, my kid is getting a fairly rigorous grading experience.
Anonymous wrote:You don't believe that my average/slacker kid with borderline map scores throughout elementary school pulled in straight As in his first quarter of ms? I promise it's true...and sad. Now he thinks school is easy. I suspect HS will be a big wake up call.
Mcps has lowered the bar significantly. Ask any teacher.
Anonymous wrote:You don't believe that my average/slacker kid with borderline map scores throughout elementary school pulled in straight As in his first quarter of ms? I promise it's true...and sad. Now he thinks school is easy. I suspect HS will be a big wake up call.
Mcps has lowered the bar significantly. Ask any teacher.