Anonymous wrote:This year, she received all Ps and one or two ES grades. In one quarter, she was all Ps. Its very clear from her work that she is just barely getting by in the subjects where her learning disability affects her. She does the minimum required on her homework and its very hard to get her to do any more at home because her teacher just focuses on what is required for the P. She isn't improving at all and this affects how fast she can do things in class. She is noticing that she is falling behind the other kids and she's anxious about this but according to her teacher she's still proficient.
Anonymous wrote:Proficiency equals mediocrity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why IS 80% of a class receiving a P for proficient?
What should I be telling my child to strive for? Proficiency??
How about Full Potential. Can great MoCo MCPS provide that to my kids? Or not so much?
Maybe 80% of a class is receiving a P for proficiency because 80% of the children in the class are proficient.
And why not tell your child to strive for proficiency?
Anonymous wrote:
Any resources spent anywhere not on bringing students up to proficiency is wasted. They will not create and collect data that differentiates student's level beyond P because this creates problems for them by showing an achievement gap. They certainly will not teach beyond proficiency.
Why IS 80% of a class receiving a P for proficient?
What should I be telling my child to strive for? Proficiency??
How about Full Potential. Can great MoCo MCPS provide that to my kids? Or not so much?
Anonymous wrote:Why IS 80% of a class receiving a P for proficient?
What should I be telling my child to strive for? Proficiency??
How about Full Potential. Can great MoCo MCPS provide that to my kids? Or not so much?
This article about Common Core was in the Post today -
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/turm...6f9e9d79e19_story.html?hpid=z3
We live in DC and were planning to stay in one of the better DCPS schools. I understand there is a huge stigma about DCPS schools, but I am in education and have been to them, seen the hard working highly effective teachers, the involved parents, etc. I love the idea of raising kids in a city.
What I want to know is: what would we be missing out on if we didn't do MoCo?
Things that make me not want to move: I heard there is a huge culture of bullying in many schools... Teacher friends have told me they get so much homework from parents posing as their child and the parents often try to negotiate grades. I know this can happen in any affluent area, but you don't hear about that much in NW DC.
Still, people tout MoCO as the best. What makes it so great?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend with a child in k in nw dc. By far a much superior school to my highly regarded MOCO school. Better facility, great garden, everything is better. I do not know about all of dc, but nw dc appears superior to lots of close in MOCO even bcc.
20/20 hindsight being everything, I wish I had bought where she lives.
Dumb shit. Your kid doesn't stay in k forever.
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend with a child in k in nw dc. By far a much superior school to my highly regarded MOCO school. Better facility, great garden, everything is better. I do not know about all of dc, but nw dc appears superior to lots of close in MOCO even bcc.
20/20 hindsight being everything, I wish I had bought where she lives.