Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Mcps staff and students have a license for Wevideo editing software.
MCPS TV is an emmy winning local cable television station so they probably use software that has more capabilities than WeVideo. If they are producing these videos, they already have the staff, equipment and software. Better to use them than to not.
???? If MCPS administrators have all this free time, put them in classrooms!!
Not all of the staff are administrators. Not every MCPS staff member is a teacher.
Any adult in MCPS can be a sub in a classroom. Subs are not teachers. Tutors are not teachers. Aides are not teachers. If they have time to make videos, they have time for students.
Not true. Or, more specifically, not allowed by the BOE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Mcps staff and students have a license for Wevideo editing software.
MCPS TV is an emmy winning local cable television station so they probably use software that has more capabilities than WeVideo. If they are producing these videos, they already have the staff, equipment and software. Better to use them than to not.
???? If MCPS administrators have all this free time, put them in classrooms!!
Not all of the staff are administrators. Not every MCPS staff member is a teacher.
Any adult in MCPS can be a sub in a classroom. Subs are not teachers. Tutors are not teachers. Aides are not teachers. If they have time to make videos, they have time for students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Mcps staff and students have a license for Wevideo editing software.
MCPS TV is an emmy winning local cable television station so they probably use software that has more capabilities than WeVideo. If they are producing these videos, they already have the staff, equipment and software. Better to use them than to not.
???? If MCPS administrators have all this free time, put them in classrooms!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Mcps staff and students have a license for Wevideo editing software.
MCPS TV is an emmy winning local cable television station so they probably use software that has more capabilities than WeVideo. If they are producing these videos, they already have the staff, equipment and software. Better to use them than to not.
???? If MCPS administrators have all this free time, put them in classrooms!!
Not all of the staff are administrators. Not every MCPS staff member is a teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Mcps staff and students have a license for Wevideo editing software.
MCPS TV is an emmy winning local cable television station so they probably use software that has more capabilities than WeVideo. If they are producing these videos, they already have the staff, equipment and software. Better to use them than to not.
???? If MCPS administrators have all this free time, put them in classrooms!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Mcps staff and students have a license for Wevideo editing software.
MCPS TV is an emmy winning local cable television station so they probably use software that has more capabilities than WeVideo. If they are producing these videos, they already have the staff, equipment and software. Better to use them than to not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Mcps staff and students have a license for Wevideo editing software.
Anonymous wrote:Parent and teacher here. I think he could do a rap video on his phone at his house and I would prefer that—cute and relatable. But the fancy camera work and editing involved clearly cost some money that our county could use elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:I'm thoroughly fed up with him. Maybe instead of wasting time making shticky videos he could spend that time learning information to help him make thoughtful decisions and understand what the programs and staff in his school system actually do. Because the current plan seems to be to just learn a couple of bullet points and then haphazardly break things with a characteristically flippant attitude and then claim you didn't mean that or it was someone else's fault when it ends up actually being a problem. The stupidity with the autism programs and the PPWs is emblematic.
He can't be gone soon enough. The videos are corny and stupid and would be tolerable if he were a good superintendent but he's not.
Anonymous wrote:I'm thoroughly fed up with him. Maybe instead of wasting time making shticky videos he could spend that time learning information to help him make thoughtful decisions and understand what the programs and staff in his school system actually do. Because the current plan seems to be to just learn a couple of bullet points and then haphazardly break things with a characteristically flippant attitude and then claim you didn't mean that or it was someone else's fault when it ends up actually being a problem. The stupidity with the autism programs and the PPWs is emblematic.
He can't be gone soon enough. The videos are corny and stupid and would be tolerable if he were a good superintendent but he's not.