Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The code of conduct and the extreme behavior issues which hijack the majority of the resources away from the rest of the students. I'm not talking about kids with IEPs.
--from a teacher
What about violations of the MCPS Employee Code of Conduct in which students who are in the care of MCPS are harmed?
-- A MCPS Parent
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please the reverse is true. MCPS is pressuring teachers to pass students who barely came to class. They can show up for a day of bogus "credit recovery" and boom, that E is now a passing grade.
So MCPS is no better than PG County Public Schools.
Teachers should use their Union Reps to bring this problem officially to light. This should be reported to the media.
The union knows because I reported it in 2012 with documentation. It’s why the admin at that school turned against me and I was singled out for the worst duties and class schedules. I finally just transferred.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please the reverse is true. MCPS is pressuring teachers to pass students who barely came to class. They can show up for a day of bogus "credit recovery" and boom, that E is now a passing grade.
So MCPS is no better than PG County Public Schools.
Teachers should use their Union Reps to bring this problem officially to light. This should be reported to the media.
The union knows because I reported it in 2012 with documentation. It’s why the admin at that school turned against me and I was singled out for the worst duties and class schedules. I finally just transferred.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please the reverse is true. MCPS is pressuring teachers to pass students who barely came to class. They can show up for a day of bogus "credit recovery" and boom, that E is now a passing grade.
So MCPS is no better than PG County Public Schools.
Teachers should use their Union Reps to bring this problem officially to light. This should be reported to the media.
The union is pretty useless on issues like these. They don't want to risk their "collaborative" relationship with MCPS. I thought they finally grew some balls with the Kemp Mill ES situation but that ended right after it started.
Anonymous wrote:So then where can one obtain a decent public education in the DC area? Or should families just pay for private school if they can do so?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please the reverse is true. MCPS is pressuring teachers to pass students who barely came to class. They can show up for a day of bogus "credit recovery" and boom, that E is now a passing grade.
So MCPS is no better than PG County Public Schools.
Teachers should use their Union Reps to bring this problem officially to light. This should be reported to the media.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please the reverse is true. MCPS is pressuring teachers to pass students who barely came to class. They can show up for a day of bogus "credit recovery" and boom, that E is now a passing grade.
So MCPS is no better than PG County Public Schools.
Teachers should use their Union Reps to bring this problem officially to light. This should be reported to the media.
Anonymous wrote:Please the reverse is true. MCPS is pressuring teachers to pass students who barely came to class. They can show up for a day of bogus "credit recovery" and boom, that E is now a passing grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Central Office is the root cause of issues at MoCo schools. It is bloated, gaming the pension system, did nothing with 8 years of serious complaints on C2.0, and only focuses on the golden unicorn Achievement Gap. Everyone else (teachers, parents who care), have to pick up the slack.
I don't understand what a golden unicorn is.