Anonymous wrote:Go spend some time on the DCUM private school forum so you can be prepared for when you spend money to educate your kids and get to complain about how you're not getting your money's worth. No one is happy. Everyone needs something to complain about.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not just FCPS. It’s any diverse school system. We can’t afford private so we supplement.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS is overrated, definitely not worth the high cost of housing and high property taxes. Now with COVID, the dysfunction is very obvious because of it's large size and the bureaucracy. I have the opportunity to be transferred out of state to place with lower cost of living and DH and I want to move, our children (MS aged) would like to stay put and stay with their friends until they finish high school. Torn about what to do.
Anonymous wrote:What can parents do? Write the school board? Impress upon FCPS that they are going to continue to lose students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved to NoVa from DC because we thought FCPS would be a great school system. If we knew how horrible it was going to be we would have stayed in DC and sent our kids to private. Now we bought out in NoVa and are still going to have to send our kids to private. I cannot believe how disappointed I am in this school system. In the next 2 weeks they have like 5 total days of school! I don’t think my kids are learning anything this year other than how to change the background on their computer screen!
Well when they do return they'll get to learn all about transgender bathrooms and gay lifestyles, so all is not lost.
Anonymous wrote:Might be individual schools issue. I am pleased with my kids’s teachers. My kids are learning in a virtual environment. The teachers have been very communicative, responsive when needed, and have not missed a day of scheduled instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was the best when grew up in the 90s but then all the illegal over ran it straining resources for the normal students
+1. That has been our observation as well.
Anonymous wrote:It was the best when grew up in the 90s but then all the illegal over ran it straining resources for the normal students
Anonymous wrote:We moved to NoVa from DC because we thought FCPS would be a great school system. If we knew how horrible it was going to be we would have stayed in DC and sent our kids to private. Now we bought out in NoVa and are still going to have to send our kids to private. I cannot believe how disappointed I am in this school system. In the next 2 weeks they have like 5 total days of school! I don’t think my kids are learning anything this year other than how to change the background on their computer screen!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Years ago I taught English at a NJ high school. We had a policy that ESOL kids who at least wrote their name on the assignment or test got a minimum passing grade. We weren’t allowed to fail them. They learned very quickly that they didn’t have to actually do anything to pass. Many still tried, but some happily took the passing grade.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was an ESL student in MCPS in the 90s and learn English . The Spanish speaking students didn’t because they would just hang out with each other. It hasn’t changed at all. I wish fellow Latinos would see how it holds them back.
But how do they pass the grade?! If you can’t read the history books in history class or write essays in English- how are you not failing?
But why?!?! This isn’t good for society. I want every member of society educated on a basic level.
It's probably because the dropout rate in high school may be linked to kids being held back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m disappointed in aspects of FCPS but I can’t help but think that there is a small vocal minority posting in DCUM that is trying to completely undermine public education. They aren’t looking for solutions. They just reply that public education is hopeless, private is the only way to go, pro-vouchers. People eat this crap up, pull their kids, and it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
That may be the case of people posting here, but IRL I know several families that left FCPS in the last year. I don't think those people have any political considerations, they just want better education for their kids.
I think I'm fairly "normal" and I never complained about FCPS prior to the pandemic. That said, for childcare reasons I sent my youngest - a Kindergartner to a K class formed at a daycare this year, and I've applied to private for all 3 kids for next year. I have fairly low standards but I am looking for 5 days a week of school while I work.
Well, then. Your concern is not academics. It is that you expect school to provide free daycare. Now you know, it's hard work. So if you want to pay for it, go for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We both went to public school and DH and I are both unbelievably disappointed in FCPS. We received much stronger educations in what I thought were crappy 1980s public schools.
DH and I are FCPS graduates and have had FCPS students since 2005. It’s been a precipitous decline.
I know that our DC aren’t experiencing the same level of academic rigor that we did.
My graduating senior shouldn’t be making poster board projects, for example.
I find this hilarious. In 2005 there were over 30,000 fewer students in the FCPS system than there are now.
For those quoting the 1980s - I can't even imagine how much smaller the school system was then versus now.
m.
This is a great point. I think the reality is that the school district (with the numbers it had) worked in the 80s and 90s. There has been a huge influx of new students and the school system is overwhelmed. We need to split it up into 4 or 5 different parts so that we can get the efficiency back from the past.
The past was not more efficient. The poor population has skyrocketed recently, and English is not their first language. Before NCLB none of this mattered. Now we care about providing services for special ed and esol students. The pie is just not big enough anymore.