Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting how so many responses to this thread are from people who wish to deny that any child could be doing just fine right now.
Many kids out there are struggling. Some kids are fine. Whether you like it or not, some kids are coming through this okay, and you don't get to tell their parents that they don't understand their own children.
What does it matter if people are skeptical?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting how so many responses to this thread are from people who wish to deny that any child could be doing just fine right now.
Many kids out there are struggling. Some kids are fine. Whether you like it or not, some kids are coming through this okay, and you don't get to tell their parents that they don't understand their own children.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Interesting how so many responses to this thread are from people who wish to deny that any child could be doing just fine right now.
Many kids out there are struggling. Some kids are fine. Whether you like it or not, some kids are coming through this okay, and you don't get to tell their parents that they don't understand their own children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personally, I don't trust many parents' a
I’m not sure what school district you are in,but MCPS has a set curriculum that is followed in normal times. Much of it building upon what was learned the previous years. If they don’t get the full curriculum there will be a difficult adjustment when the curriculum goes back to normal. Also, a fair number of middle schoolers at our school start taking high school credits in 6th.
We are new to MCPS middle school and our kids are adjusting well to DL, but I suspect they just aren't learning very much. They only have each class twice a week as opposed to five times a week. They are definitely not over-screen timed because they have lots of breaks and no homework. But I suspect at year-end assessments we will find they didn't learn thet much. I'm OK with that (although I probably was more Ok when I thought this was going to be a 4-6 month thing than a year + thing). DH and I work 50-60 hours a week, we just have no time to supervise or supplement. So as long as they are happy and healthy and learning something that will have to be enough for now. I figure my parents had war-time disruptions of their education, had to go to school in two totally different languages than the ones they spoke at home, due to multiple occupations of their country. They came through just fine.
You could make the time to support your kids but choose not to. Big difference. In MS, depending on the school, normal is only to have class 2-3 days a week on a rotation.Anonymous01/27/2021 22:33 Subject: If your kid is thriving with DL....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Personally, I don't trust many parents' a
I’m not sure what school district you are in,but MCPS has a set curriculum that is followed in normal times. Much of it building upon what was learned the previous years. If they don’t get the full curriculum there will be a difficult adjustment when the curriculum goes back to normal. Also, a fair number of middle schoolers at our school start taking high school credits in 6th.
We are new to MCPS middle school and our kids are adjusting well to DL, but I suspect they just aren't learning very much. They only have each class twice a week as opposed to five times a week. They are definitely not over-screen timed because they have lots of breaks and no homework. But I suspect at year-end assessments we will find they didn't learn thet much. I'm OK with that (although I probably was more Ok when I thought this was going to be a 4-6 month thing than a year + thing). DH and I work 50-60 hours a week, we just have no time to supervise or supplement. So as long as they are happy and healthy and learning something that will have to be enough for now. I figure my parents had war-time disruptions of their education, had to go to school in two totally different languages than the ones they spoke at home, due to multiple occupations of their country. They came through just fine.Anonymous01/25/2021 19:02 Subject: If your kid is thriving with DL....
Anonymous wrote:Interesting how so many responses to this thread are from people who wish to deny that any child could be doing just fine right now.
Many kids out there are struggling. Some kids are fine. Whether you like it or not, some kids are coming through this okay, and you don't get to tell their parents that they don't understand their own children.
+1Anonymous01/25/2021 19:01 Subject: If your kid is thriving with DL....
Interesting how so many responses to this thread are from people who wish to deny that any child could be doing just fine right now.
Many kids out there are struggling. Some kids are fine. Whether you like it or not, some kids are coming through this okay, and you don't get to tell their parents that they don't understand their own children.