Anonymous wrote:I never went to any of those meetings. Class selection did not seem that complicated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mixed classes would really affect our decision to accept the magnet invite, we are thinking to DC can stay with friends in JW and take advantage of the cohort classes
Your decision to accept the magnet invite should have been made by February 7th.![]()
Maybe they are talking about a 4th grader?
Anonymous wrote:That was the most poorly organized, stuffed to the gills, overheated, and rushed "meeting" I have ever been to in my life. Spending 10min in the hall for each rotation because they were too short and not enough info was presented. It took 7min to clear people out and smoosh people back in like sardines. Everything was running late. Standing room only in every room. It was a complete disappointment all around. No one was able to answer questions. They had not one session on the electives which most people seem to have questions on. We heard twice "it is hard to explain". WTF does that mean? Then they have the balls to say see you later - the registration form is due tomorrow - bye!
Now I get it that some parents can be annoying AF. I mean we actually heard a Dad asking if this track there child can not take AP Stats, but can they take another Calc course in 12 GRADE!!!He waited until after the presentation, but there were a line of people each times for questions and they pushed you out for another rotation. Just said to contact the school with any questions. Trying to do these rotations in avoidance of questions was just a terrible way to promote your school. No one was happy. Everyone was annoyed. Not feeling good about this school at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The mixed classes would really affect our decision to accept the magnet invite, we are thinking to DC can stay with friends in JW and take advantage of the cohort classes
Your decision to accept the magnet invite should have been made by February 7th.![]()
Anonymous wrote:The mixed classes would really affect our decision to accept the magnet invite, we are thinking to DC can stay with friends in JW and take advantage of the cohort classes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But the HIGH kids are mixed this coming year. No cohort.
That truly sucks. HIGH has been my DC’s most engaging class. And DC doesn’t even love history. But it’s challenging and engaging and has a great group of kids.
That’s strange, I asked and he clarified they are separate classes, there are 4 classes of HIGH6 for about 120 kids out of 500 kids and that this cohort continue to HIGH7 and 8..
I don’t understand why there are different versions of the information
Incoming 6th graders will be in all heterogeneous classes. AIM mixed with IM, HIGH mixed with HIWS, Advanced English mixed with regular English, etc.
We were told the same. Pretty pissed off. I was under the impression middle school started tracking to teach all of these kids at their level. I think once again, diversity is more important than education. It needs to look better than actually be better. And all of the kids suffer because of it.
This is the story of MCPS. And, why MCPS has been declining for the past decade. Nobody benefits.
But not all middle schools are doing this. Actually most don’t. They at least have some cohorts.
Which MSs have cohorts? I hear similar complaints from kids all over the county in other middle schools!
Anonymous wrote:The mixed classes would really affect our decision to accept the magnet invite, we are thinking to DC can stay with friends in JW and take advantage of the cohort classes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But the HIGH kids are mixed this coming year. No cohort.
That truly sucks. HIGH has been my DC’s most engaging class. And DC doesn’t even love history. But it’s challenging and engaging and has a great group of kids.
That’s strange, I asked and he clarified they are separate classes, there are 4 classes of HIGH6 for about 120 kids out of 500 kids and that this cohort continue to HIGH7 and 8..
I don’t understand why there are different versions of the information
Incoming 6th graders will be in all heterogeneous classes. AIM mixed with IM, HIGH mixed with HIWS, Advanced English mixed with regular English, etc.
We were told the same. Pretty pissed off. I was under the impression middle school started tracking to teach all of these kids at their level. I think once again, diversity is more important than education. It needs to look better than actually be better. And all of the kids suffer because of it.
This is the story of MCPS. And, why MCPS has been declining for the past decade. Nobody benefits.
But not all middle schools are doing this. Actually most don’t. They at least have some cohorts.
Many have block schedules too. Principal is doing a terrible job. Just worried about bringing up the rear from the one feeder.
Anonymous wrote:So why promise Magnet lite courses for kids who were not admitted to Magnet middle schools because of the new peer cohort criteria. I thought the whole point of these courses was to provide students with a challenging curriculum AND a peer group. If everyone is mixed in the same class you can’t offer the same level of rigor or challenge.
Anonymous wrote:But the HIGH kids are mixed this coming year. No cohort.
That truly sucks. HIGH has been my DC’s most engaging class. And DC doesn’t even love history. But it’s challenging and engaging and has a great group of kids.
That’s strange, I asked and he clarified they are separate classes, there are 4 classes of HIGH6 for about 120 kids out of 500 kids and that this cohort continue to HIGH7 and 8..
I don’t understand why there are different versions of the information
Incoming 6th graders will be in all heterogeneous classes. AIM mixed with IM, HIGH mixed with HIWS, Advanced English mixed with regular English, etc.