Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t even move to FL if somebody paid me. Why would I ever want my kids to go to school with the kids of people who agree with Desantis? Or teachers who agree with him?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fact: Florida has higher NAEP scores than ‘all-mighty’ Maryland even though Maryland spends 2x more. Cue someone from MoCo who blames Baltimore for these abysmal scores when MCPS is the largest school district in Maryland. Lol.
This cannot be.
Link?
NP. You could have just looked this up yourself, could t you? DC at the absolute bottom, FL near the very top.
https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/profiles/stateprofile?chort=1&sub=MAT&sj=&sfj=NP&st=MN&year=2022R3
This doesn't show what you think it does.
https://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/subject/participating/pdfs/participating_10_4.pdf
Federal law specifies that NAEP is voluntary for every student, school, school district, and state. However, federal law also requires all states that receive Title I funds to participate in NAEP reading and mathematics assessments at fourth and eighth grades. Similarly, school districts that receive Title I funds and are selected for the NAEP sample are also required to participate in NAEP reading and mathematics assessments at fourth and eighth grades.
Other than Title 1 schools, which yes, would include Baltimore City schools, you don't have any idea which schools in MD, or FL for that matter, took part.
This is cherry picking data.
When I first saw the data, I was shocked, too, until I read that FAQ and realized that the data does not reflect the entire state.
Anonymous wrote:My MIL is a Florida public school teacher and is counting the days until she retires at the end of the year. She said the environment has gotten unbelievably toxic. And this is an old white lady who used to vote Republican. DeSantis is really that bad.
Anonymous wrote:I have two kids in the public school system here. We are in an IB elementary school with incredible teachers, small class sizes, and two PTA's (one for school, one for IB program) that raise funds to provide the very best of things for the school. We are obviously very happy with the schooling, and do agree with Desantis in many things he's done for the state and for schools. I am also very close with 3 friends who are teachers in my area and they have no issues with the things Desantis has done regarding education. They have similar grievances most teachers have around the country about challenging students, too much testing etc.
After elementary we will go private unless we get into the corresponding middle school IB program. This is likely the case since we get priority coming from the elementary school. There is nothing wrong with the middle or high schools here. My DH and I both graduated from public Florida high schools and have done well for ourselves. We just want to continue with the small class sizes, are concerned with school safety, and enjoy being a part of a school with a very active parent scene.
If you navigate the school system here, your kids will do wonderfully. This goes for any state you are in.
Anonymous wrote:I could not live in Fl, nor could I send my kids to a FL school. Teachers have to have their classroom libraries all "pre-approved". FL won't allow AP African American History. The "don't say gay" law. It's all pretty Nazi-ish, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kids are female I would seriously reconsider.
Why?
are they letting boys call themselves girls in order to access female spaces down there?
Anonymous wrote:If your kids are female I would seriously reconsider.