Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't Minifa expand the number of CO employees by 30% to help improve their focus on equity?
And how did they do?
They've done a lot to tweak the optics on closing the gap by creating more honors for all programs and reducing opportunities for advanced learners with all these lottery programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't Minifa expand the number of CO employees by 30% to help improve their focus on equity?
And how did they do?
They've done a lot to tweak the optics on closing the gap by creating more honors for all programs and reducing opportunities for advanced learners with all these lottery programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't Minifa expand the number of CO employees by 30% to help improve their focus on equity?
And how did they do?
Anonymous wrote:Didn't Minifa expand the number of CO employees by 30% to help improve their focus on equity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a brand new RT in high school and an achievement specialist informed me that she was assigned to my school. She said in our summer meeting that she would be supporting our department because our focus students weren't doing well. We were supposed to meet regularly that year. I met with her twice. Our initial meeting in the summer and once more over the course of the school year. I think achievement specialist should be on the list to go.
Get that "achievement specialist" to be reassigned to a position at a MCPS HS experiencing problems surrounding bathrooms.
Anonymous wrote:I was a brand new RT in high school and an achievement specialist informed me that she was assigned to my school. She said in our summer meeting that she would be supporting our department because our focus students weren't doing well. We were supposed to meet regularly that year. I met with her twice. Our initial meeting in the summer and once more over the course of the school year. I think achievement specialist should be on the list to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't know if this has been covered in the last 5-6 pages, but what CO needs is more hands to get the MCAP test results into envelopes to mail them out to families. It is beyond ridonc that students were assessed last Spring and results have yet to be seen by parents (and maybe the schools too). What meaning is there to have students sit for hours for multiple state mandated tests when results take this long to return? So which ever department it is that is in charge of mailing home assessments definitely needs more people to package, or the department needs a machine to do the packaging. And finally the actual mailing. Someone at CO should advocate for release of results earlier than it is taking now. If results can't be sent out in a timely manner, allow families to opt their kid from taking the damn tests. Get it together, Maryland! Rant over.
MCAP is a silly test that has not even been vetted. Further, it is a state test, not MCPS. The county shouldn't waste a dime on this.
Passing the MCAP in high school is a literal graduation requirement. It is very much the responsibility of MCPS to communicate results to parents. Please educate yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't know if this has been covered in the last 5-6 pages, but what CO needs is more hands to get the MCAP test results into envelopes to mail them out to families. It is beyond ridonc that students were assessed last Spring and results have yet to be seen by parents (and maybe the schools too). What meaning is there to have students sit for hours for multiple state mandated tests when results take this long to return? So which ever department it is that is in charge of mailing home assessments definitely needs more people to package, or the department needs a machine to do the packaging. And finally the actual mailing. Someone at CO should advocate for release of results earlier than it is taking now. If results can't be sent out in a timely manner, allow families to opt their kid from taking the damn tests. Get it together, Maryland! Rant over.
MCAP is a silly test that has not even been vetted. Further, it is a state test, not MCPS. The county shouldn't waste a dime on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[url]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Mcps staff that works at a Title I school. We have our school based PCC (parent community coordinator) that works at the school every day. We also have a central office PCC that is supposed to be here once a week. We don't see the central office pcc much. I also just heard MCPS is thinking of increasing the CO pccs to Step 22 from thwir current step 20. If the central office pccs dont work, why would you increase their salary?
Exactly. What the heck do they actually do if they are not visiting the schools? Another example of over compensated CO staff.
Apparently they are home rejecting invitations to join meetings at schools and not meeting with families. How are you increasing their pay when there are so many complaints about this office? Who is giving them a raise? What supervisor/or office?
NP
Where are those "many complaints"? DCUM?
Talk to your supervisors that send out surveys to school admin and see what the admin say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[url]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Mcps staff that works at a Title I school. We have our school based PCC (parent community coordinator) that works at the school every day. We also have a central office PCC that is supposed to be here once a week. We don't see the central office pcc much. I also just heard MCPS is thinking of increasing the CO pccs to Step 22 from thwir current step 20. If the central office pccs dont work, why would you increase their salary?
Exactly. What the heck do they actually do if they are not visiting the schools? Another example of over compensated CO staff.
Apparently they are home rejecting invitations to join meetings at schools and not meeting with families. How are you increasing their pay when there are so many complaints about this office? Who is giving them a raise? What supervisor/or office?
NP
Where are those "many complaints"? DCUM?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[url]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Mcps staff that works at a Title I school. We have our school based PCC (parent community coordinator) that works at the school every day. We also have a central office PCC that is supposed to be here once a week. We don't see the central office pcc much. I also just heard MCPS is thinking of increasing the CO pccs to Step 22 from thwir current step 20. If the central office pccs dont work, why would you increase their salary?
Exactly. What the heck do they actually do if they are not visiting the schools? Another example of over compensated CO staff.
Apparently they are home rejecting invitations to join meetings at schools and not meeting with families. How are you increasing their pay when there are so many complaints about this office? Who is giving them a raise? What supervisor/or office?
NP
Where are those "many complaints"? DCUM?