Anonymous wrote:Cause for concern in the FAR report that just came out from DCPCSB.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, the Director of Early Childhood Ed left also?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that for the school to stabilize, admin will need to do the hard work of overhauling
the curriculum. Until that's done, the mainly inexperienced staff has to struggle with teaching
for the PARCC test, the hard work of the project-based curriculum, and the inclusion
classroom. As a former parent, I am also aware that some teachers have been subject to violence
and i've worried about whether they have received the support that they deserve.
Violence from the students? thats troubling. I have CMI first on my list, alhtough its highly unlikely we will get in, all these crazy CMI posts do give me pause. We don't have this much parent and admin drama at our IB title one school.
Physical aggression or transgressions are not uncommon among kids on the ASD spectrum. Obviously, not every kid with ASD will have these issues, or have them repeatedly, but it is going to happen. Well trained and supported teachers will have ways to deal with most of these incidents and can defuse them and keep everyone safe. But if a teacher is not trained or prepared, it can feel like an assault. Not saying that this is what is happening at CMI; I’m just saying that if a school has a substantial population of kids on the spectrum physical aggression and transgressions should not be surprising.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that for the school to stabilize, admin will need to do the hard work of overhauling
the curriculum. Until that's done, the mainly inexperienced staff has to struggle with teaching
for the PARCC test, the hard work of the project-based curriculum, and the inclusion
classroom. As a former parent, I am also aware that some teachers have been subject to violence
and i've worried about whether they have received the support that they deserve.
Violence from the students? thats troubling. I have CMI first on my list, alhtough its highly unlikely we will get in, all these crazy CMI posts do give me pause. We don't have this much parent and admin drama at our IB title one school.
Anonymous wrote:People just love to bash this school. I wonder if the numbers will of applicants this year will be dropping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But CMI got tons of love in the past, so something has happened/changed. And, from what I am hearing from CMI families - some of whom have left -the school is great for early childhood education and certain special needs, but that is it. I am hearing great disappointment with upper elementary and middle school and SN that does not fit into the CMI model. Is this right? Honestly, I am not worried about parent drama - we are a two parent working family and do not have time for all of that. Just need a good place for our kids.
You've got it right. Only thing that has changed is the proportion of families experiencing upper elementary/middle.
The problems were here all along: lack of meaningful support/PD for inexperienced teachers tasked with complex teaching assignments (inclusion classroom, project-based curriculum + common core). Lack of clear structure and approach for classroom management grows discipline problems, alongside poor/lazy approach to academic and social/emotional differentiation. Discipline issues grow as instruction weakens in upper grades (when kids are increasingly ready for rigor, but there is none). Minimal to no school-wide expectations for students - behavior, performance, etc. Misinterpreting inclusion as "anything goes" or personalized learning, but without the staffing, training and support to back it up and deliver. Not just the teachers. Elementary school instructional support is nonexistent too.
They may figure it out, but the hole is deep.
Anonymous wrote:But CMI got tons of love in the past, so something has happened/changed. And, from what I am hearing from CMI families - some of whom have left -the school is great for early childhood education and certain special needs, but that is it. I am hearing great disappointment with upper elementary and middle school and SN that does not fit into the CMI model. Is this right? Honestly, I am not worried about parent drama - we are a two parent working family and do not have time for all of that. Just need a good place for our kids.