Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
No they didn't. My kids teachers covered everything. Some kids parents however dropped the ball
Mentioning a topic may be "covering" it. It's not the same as spending time on it.
They covered it enough that DC was able to get a perfect score on the grade 6 module 6 assessment so I'd say that was covered, but if it makes you feel better to make up excuses be my guest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
No they didn't. My kids teachers covered everything. Some kids parents however dropped the ball
Mentioning a topic may be "covering" it. It's not the same as spending time on it.
They covered it enough that DC was able to get a perfect score on the grade 6 module 6 assessment so I'd say that was covered, but if it makes you feel better to make up excuses be my guest.
That is amazing! On the last page you said that your class was going Module 6 this week and now they’re already done and tested a week early! On top of that, your child aced a test that doesn’t exist as the county only created tests for Modules 1-4. Please tell us this school!
I'm guessing there's more than one school that finished the material. Not all students and teachers checked out just a few.
Ours too, but some parents are still very bitter over schools shutting down during the pandemic. They resented spending time with their kids and are looking for every opportunity to complain. This past year was hard but honestly the switch to Eureka which has no equivalent for compacted was more of an issue than anything.
Our school also wrapped up module 6 last week. I don't really think it's a big deal or why this bothers some people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
No they didn't. My kids teachers covered everything. Some kids parents however dropped the ball
Mentioning a topic may be "covering" it. It's not the same as spending time on it.
They covered it enough that DC was able to get a perfect score on the grade 6 module 6 assessment so I'd say that was covered, but if it makes you feel better to make up excuses be my guest.
That is amazing! On the last page you said that your class was going Module 6 this week and now they’re already done and tested a week early! On top of that, your child aced a test that doesn’t exist as the county only created tests for Modules 1-4. Please tell us this school!
I'm guessing there's more than one school that finished the material. Not all students and teachers checked out just a few.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
No they didn't. My kids teachers covered everything. Some kids parents however dropped the ball
Mentioning a topic may be "covering" it. It's not the same as spending time on it.
They covered it enough that DC was able to get a perfect score on the grade 6 module 6 assessment so I'd say that was covered, but if it makes you feel better to make up excuses be my guest.
That is amazing! On the last page you said that your class was going Module 6 this week and now they’re already done and tested a week early! On top of that, your child aced a test that doesn’t exist as the county only created tests for Modules 1-4. Please tell us this school!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
No they didn't. My kids teachers covered everything. Some kids parents however dropped the ball
Mentioning a topic may be "covering" it. It's not the same as spending time on it.
They covered it enough that DC was able to get a perfect score on the grade 6 module 6 assessment so I'd say that was covered, but if it makes you feel better to make up excuses be my guest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those scheduled to take Algebra 1 next year, the document states:
"When considering students for Algebra 1, previous MCAP performance is a critical data point. Students not consistently earning a 3 or higher on prior MCAP assessments are likely to need Bridge Projects when taking Algebra 1 in Middle School. This pathway is tenuous given the number of 8th grade MCAP failures in normal years."
When did students take the MCAP most recently, and where can we find those scores?
+1 anyone?
Two years ago -- spring of 2019. Only grades 3 and up took it. Scores were mailed home, so you'll have to check your own records or contact your school to ask.
You can look at mcap/parcc scores by county and school at this site
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov
The MCAP replaced the PARCC in 2019, I don't think kids took anything in 2020, so, there was only 1 year of MCAP testing, but you should be able to see previous PARCC testing scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
No they didn't. My kids teachers covered everything. Some kids parents however dropped the ball
Mentioning a topic may be "covering" it. It's not the same as spending time on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those scheduled to take Algebra 1 next year, the document states:
"When considering students for Algebra 1, previous MCAP performance is a critical data point. Students not consistently earning a 3 or higher on prior MCAP assessments are likely to need Bridge Projects when taking Algebra 1 in Middle School. This pathway is tenuous given the number of 8th grade MCAP failures in normal years."
When did students take the MCAP most recently, and where can we find those scores?
+1 anyone?
Two years ago -- spring of 2019. Only grades 3 and up took it. Scores were mailed home, so you'll have to check your own records or contact your school to ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
No they didn't. My kids teachers covered everything. Some kids parents however dropped the ball
Anonymous wrote:The recovery plan only goes up to Precalculus. What about the students who took Calculus or higher? What about the Seniors that just graduated?
MCPS failed all students this year simply by not teaching the curriculum in all math classes. There’s no way for all students to recover what was lost this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are links posted by OP that list which content was skipped. The lists were made by MCPS. But posters keep insisting that their schools taught everything. How did they teach it if math was taught only twice a week instead of four times a week this year? They either skipped content or did not teach it in depth. But I guess people want to believe that virtual year is equivalent to a normal year.
It's an advanced class where 3 years of material is taught in 2. They went at fast pace but my kid at least managed to axe the assessments so it was in depth enough
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are links posted by OP that list which content was skipped. The lists were made by MCPS. But posters keep insisting that their schools taught everything. How did they teach it if math was taught only twice a week instead of four times a week this year? They either skipped content or did not teach it in depth. But I guess people want to believe that virtual year is equivalent to a normal year.
We have compacted math everyday for 1+ hours with the possible exception of Wednesday.
Anonymous wrote:There are links posted by OP that list which content was skipped. The lists were made by MCPS. But posters keep insisting that their schools taught everything. How did they teach it if math was taught only twice a week instead of four times a week this year? They either skipped content or did not teach it in depth. But I guess people want to believe that virtual year is equivalent to a normal year.