Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, You have some major reading comp issues. Hogan repeatedly states he disagrees with Trump’s policies and is being held out by the writer as a representative of a dofferent wing of the republican party.
+1 - OP you seem to have an agenda, and that's fine, but your reading comprehension could use some help. I am not a fan of Hogan, probably won't vote for him, but putting him on the Trump train based on these comments is ridiculous.
+1
I guess to OP unless you publicly and loudly rant against Trump then that must mean you are for him. He's not an apologist. Just maybe not as vocal as others.
+ 1. Are people forgetting that he is a Republican? Of course he’s not going after trump with the same fervor as the democrats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, You have some major reading comp issues. Hogan repeatedly states he disagrees with Trump’s policies and is being held out by the writer as a representative of a dofferent wing of the republican party.
+1 - OP you seem to have an agenda, and that's fine, but your reading comprehension could use some help. I am not a fan of Hogan, probably won't vote for him, but putting him on the Trump train based on these comments is ridiculous.
+1
I guess to OP unless you publicly and loudly rant against Trump then that must mean you are for him. He's not an apologist. Just maybe not as vocal as others.
+ 1. Are people forgetting that he is a Republican? Of course he’s not going after trump with the same fervor as the democrats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, You have some major reading comp issues. Hogan repeatedly states he disagrees with Trump’s policies and is being held out by the writer as a representative of a dofferent wing of the republican party.
+1 - OP you seem to have an agenda, and that's fine, but your reading comprehension could use some help. I am not a fan of Hogan, probably won't vote for him, but putting him on the Trump train based on these comments is ridiculous.
+1
I guess to OP unless you publicly and loudly rant against Trump then that must mean you are for him. He's not an apologist. Just maybe not as vocal as others.
Anonymous wrote:Before Hogan 23 of 24 school districts started before Labor Day.
I don't care when Chicago or Miami or Tuscon starts.
I know my kids both suffered on APs this year because only some of their teachers even bothered to account for the later start.
By the end of the year, they had been told things would be better this year.
I suspect that things in OC will be similar. Last year people used the extra week in OC but this year they had time to plan to go somewhere else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Regardless of summer brain drain, the one thing that is true is that national test dates remain the same- so AP and SAT scores will decrease because there will be fewer days to prep and fewer breaks to "settle" the brains for learning. MD used to lead the area with earlier start dates and it will reflect in these test scores- so it will be interesting to see how this plays out.
Kids take the ACT and SAT at various times throughout the year. I doubt we'll see much difference.
The AP exam issue is an interesting one. If there weren't compression on the back end, I could see your point. But by setting both a start and end date, I think we'll actually see that the kids are in school approximately the same by the exam dates. Maybe with a shift of a couple of days one way or the other.
AP exams happen in May. Since the kids still have to be in school the same number of days as before, those days just have to be collapsed. Fewer short weeks, shorter spring break, all of that compensates for the week later kids start. If AP exams were a driving concern, we'd start school the beginning of August.
I would love to know if jurisdictions that start the school year earlier have better AP test score results. [b]Mos mid-west schools are starting next week. [b]I wonder if those kids on the average do better for nAPs?
Are they?
I’m from Wisconsin and state law is that school cannot start until September 1st (depending on how Labor Day falls at could be a bit later than that, but school never starts in August). My siblings’ children in the Twin Cities (three different school districts) aren’t starting until September 4th either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Regardless of summer brain drain, the one thing that is true is that national test dates remain the same- so AP and SAT scores will decrease because there will be fewer days to prep and fewer breaks to "settle" the brains for learning. MD used to lead the area with earlier start dates and it will reflect in these test scores- so it will be interesting to see how this plays out.
Kids take the ACT and SAT at various times throughout the year. I doubt we'll see much difference.
The AP exam issue is an interesting one. If there weren't compression on the back end, I could see your point. But by setting both a start and end date, I think we'll actually see that the kids are in school approximately the same by the exam dates. Maybe with a shift of a couple of days one way or the other.
AP exams happen in May. Since the kids still have to be in school the same number of days as before, those days just have to be collapsed. Fewer short weeks, shorter spring break, all of that compensates for the week later kids start. If AP exams were a driving concern, we'd start school the beginning of August.
I would love to know if jurisdictions that start the school year earlier have better AP test score results. [b]Mos mid-west schools are starting next week. [b]I wonder if those kids on the average do better for nAPs?
Anonymous wrote:MD schools have slid in rankings every year since Hogan became Governor. He needs to be asked about this in EVERY interview and debate. What's he doing to stem the slide? And why did the slide start with his election?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My concerm is that Jealous is proposing universal preschool and free higher education when the state is having issues funding K-12, especially in light of the fact that many school facilities are reaching obsolescence and need to be replaced.
There’s only so much money to play with, especially given how high our state taxes are relative to other states.
Hate to burst your Hogan bubble, but Hogan was the Governor who approved free community college for those households making less than $124K/year. So that ship has sailed. And no one is really talking about free pre-K seriously in this time of shrinking budgets.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-hogan-approves-community-college-20180504-story.html
Jealous's plan for universal pre-K: https://benjealous.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/BJM_k12_v1.pdf
Jealous's plan for free community college for all, no income cap: https://benjealous.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/BJM_HigherEd_v2.pdf
Maybe Jealous isn't serious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My concerm is that Jealous is proposing universal preschool and free higher education when the state is having issues funding K-12, especially in light of the fact that many school facilities are reaching obsolescence and need to be replaced.
There’s only so much money to play with, especially given how high our state taxes are relative to other states.
Jealous can’t do it unilaterally. He needs the general assembly.
Don't debate these people, just shame them.
"high taxes" fears = racist right wing talking-points.
That's how they're told in their marching orders to frame the argument - say it's about taxes and fiscal policy. That hides their racism against a POC running for governor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Regardless of summer brain drain, the one thing that is true is that national test dates remain the same- so AP and SAT scores will decrease because there will be fewer days to prep and fewer breaks to "settle" the brains for learning. MD used to lead the area with earlier start dates and it will reflect in these test scores- so it will be interesting to see how this plays out.
Kids take the ACT and SAT at various times throughout the year. I doubt we'll see much difference.
The AP exam issue is an interesting one. If there weren't compression on the back end, I could see your point. But by setting both a start and end date, I think we'll actually see that the kids are in school approximately the same by the exam dates. Maybe with a shift of a couple of days one way or the other.
AP exams happen in May. Since the kids still have to be in school the same number of days as before, those days just have to be collapsed. Fewer short weeks, shorter spring break, all of that compensates for the week later kids start. If AP exams were a driving concern, we'd start school the beginning of August.
Anonymous wrote:Regardless of summer brain drain, the one thing that is true is that national test dates remain the same- so AP and SAT scores will decrease because there will be fewer days to prep and fewer breaks to "settle" the brains for learning. MD used to lead the area with earlier start dates and it will reflect in these test scores- so it will be interesting to see how this plays out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My concerm is that Jealous is proposing universal preschool and free higher education when the state is having issues funding K-12, especially in light of the fact that many school facilities are reaching obsolescence and need to be replaced.
There’s only so much money to play with, especially given how high our state taxes are relative to other states.
Hate to burst your Hogan bubble, but Hogan was the Governor who approved free community college for those households making less than $124K/year. So that ship has sailed. And no one is really talking about free pre-K seriously in this time of shrinking budgets.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-hogan-approves-community-college-20180504-story.html