Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is the school's fault. What happened in the elementary years. Are you saying they just showed up in 9th grade?
Ah, so it wasn't the ninth-grade teacher's fault, it's the fault of the kindergarten teacher, the first-grade teacher, the second-grade teacher...?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should any one care which school any student goes to. If you want to do apples to apples comparison then here's what you can do -
AP classes - how many, which ones, and AP scores
SAT/ACT scores.
That's all the comparison I need.
Test scores are almost completely related to wealth of the community not school quality.
Which shows how crappy MCPS is at teaching unless you have tutors, parents teaching a home, test prep classes etc....
The majority of my 9th graders in on level classes read anywhere from a 1st to 4th grade level.
What miracle should I perform to get all 29 of the kids (per class) to reach proficiency level by June?
b/c it's my fault, no?
Anonymous wrote:Sherwood belongs on the list too -- 55% white.
Anonymous wrote:It is the school's fault. What happened in the elementary years. Are you saying they just showed up in 9th grade?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should any one care which school any student goes to. If you want to do apples to apples comparison then here's what you can do -
AP classes - how many, which ones, and AP scores
SAT/ACT scores.
That's all the comparison I need.
Test scores are almost completely related to wealth of the community not school quality.
Which shows how crappy MCPS is at teaching unless you have tutors, parents teaching a home, test prep classes etc....
Anonymous wrote:Sherwood belongs on the list too -- 55% white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our kids are also at WJ. One thing to keep in mind about the WJ cluster is that it is somewhat unique among the Potomac and Bethesda clusters due to the fact that there are many, many apartments and townhomes in North Bethesda (most which feeds to WJ). This means there are more families at WJ with incomes across a wider spectrum than you'll find at Churchill, Whitman and Wooten.
Percent of students at Walter Johnson with Free and Reduced Meals status: 8%
Percent of students at Walter Johnson who have ever had Free and Reduced Meals status: 18%
The same numbers for MCPS at a whole: 35%/43%
But yes, that's more than at Churchill (5%/10%), Whitman (<5%, <5%), and Wootton (<5%, 11%).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why should any one care which school any student goes to. If you want to do apples to apples comparison then here's what you can do -
AP classes - how many, which ones, and AP scores
SAT/ACT scores.
That's all the comparison I need.
Test scores are almost completely related to wealth of the community not school quality.
Anonymous wrote:Why should any one care which school any student goes to. If you want to do apples to apples comparison then here's what you can do -
AP classes - how many, which ones, and AP scores
SAT/ACT scores.
That's all the comparison I need.