Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t say they are learning as much as they normally would. That doesn’t mean they aren’t learning AT ALL. They are doing an admirable job. It’s insulting for parents to just blanket state they’re not learning or getting anything or progressing. They’re living through a worldwide crisis and personal disruption of normal. No they’re not achieving what they would in 2018, none of us are. But don’t take away what they have been able to do by claiming no progress or learning at all whatsoever is happening.
These kind of blanket statements are equally ridiculous. How could you possibly know what’s going on across the district learning wise?
I as a teacher who works in this system have access to more information and data points than parents. You are mostly speaking about your own kids. I am not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t say they are learning as much as they normally would. That doesn’t mean they aren’t learning AT ALL. They are doing an admirable job. It’s insulting for parents to just blanket state they’re not learning or getting anything or progressing. They’re living through a worldwide crisis and personal disruption of normal. No they’re not achieving what they would in 2018, none of us are. But don’t take away what they have been able to do by claiming no progress or learning at all whatsoever is happening.
These kind of blanket statements are equally ridiculous. How could you possibly know what’s going on across the district learning wise?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. I will go back when I’m asked to go back, but if they tell me I can teach from home forever I’d happily do that too. My job is to teach, that’s what I’m doing. My job is not to fight leadership about what that teaching should look like.
The idea that I’m a bad teacher because I’m not fighting the FEA rhetoric is ridiculous. I’m not an FEA member, I want nothing to do with it. I just want to write my lessons and teach my students, wherever the location is.
I'm curious. What grade do you teach? I teach a primary grade and I don't know anybody who would make that statement.
My husband teaches middle school math and likes teaching from home. I told him fcps may offer more virtual learning in the future so go ahead and apply for a job doing it full time if he wants. He would go back whenever but likes it more than he thought.
Middle school math is extremely difficult for the students. My kid who used to
love math has a D and is miserable. Tons of time wasted manipulating slide show tools and whatnot and very little learning time.
Disagree with pp about high school math working well online. Maybe for the teachers but not for kids. The online formatting is frustrating, wastes tons of time,
learning is extremely difficult, class time is much less than a normal year.
we had to hire a math tutor for the first time ever because our bright kid was failing algebra 2-honors.
I can't speak to HS math. But my child's MS Honors Algebra 1 teacher is doing fabulous. My only gripe is that they've scaled back the curriculum and aren't going as depth into some of the topics. She said that is across FCPS. That's not her. That's the county, which is bullshit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We won’t know how much learning loss there has been for elementary until school reopens.
The older kids are earning As and Bs just for showing up.
Agree. And the teachers have clearly been instructed by admin to pass the high schoolers this year by hook or by crook even if the student has done no work and learned nothing. It’s going to be a mess next year when all those kids who were given Ds just to avoid having colossal failures try to do the next level of math, foreign language, etc without having learned this year’s material.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. I will go back when I’m asked to go back, but if they tell me I can teach from home forever I’d happily do that too. My job is to teach, that’s what I’m doing. My job is not to fight leadership about what that teaching should look like.
The idea that I’m a bad teacher because I’m not fighting the FEA rhetoric is ridiculous. I’m not an FEA member, I want nothing to do with it. I just want to write my lessons and teach my students, wherever the location is.
I'm curious. What grade do you teach? I teach a primary grade and I don't know anybody who would make that statement.
My husband teaches middle school math and likes teaching from home. I told him fcps may offer more virtual learning in the future so go ahead and apply for a job doing it full time if he wants. He would go back whenever but likes it more than he thought.
Middle school math is extremely difficult for the students. My kid who used to
love math has a D and is miserable. Tons of time wasted manipulating slide show tools and whatnot and very little learning time.
Disagree with pp about high school math working well online. Maybe for the teachers but not for kids. The online formatting is frustrating, wastes tons of time,
learning is extremely difficult, class time is much less than a normal year.
we had to hire a math tutor for the first time ever because our bright kid was failing algebra 2-honors.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t say they are learning as much as they normally would. That doesn’t mean they aren’t learning AT ALL. They are doing an admirable job. It’s insulting for parents to just blanket state they’re not learning or getting anything or progressing. They’re living through a worldwide crisis and personal disruption of normal. No they’re not achieving what they would in 2018, none of us are. But don’t take away what they have been able to do by claiming no progress or learning at all whatsoever is happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. I will go back when I’m asked to go back, but if they tell me I can teach from home forever I’d happily do that too. My job is to teach, that’s what I’m doing. My job is not to fight leadership about what that teaching should look like.
The idea that I’m a bad teacher because I’m not fighting the FEA rhetoric is ridiculous. I’m not an FEA member, I want nothing to do with it. I just want to write my lessons and teach my students, wherever the location is.
You aren’t teaching if the kids aren’t learning. What you are doing from home right now isn’t teaching.
DP. A lot of kids are learning. We have data that shows this. You don’t get to deny their hard work and progress because it doesn’t fit your narrative. Distance learning isn’t ideal but teachers and kids have been busting their a$$ to make it work. It’s not okay to erase that or deny it because it’s inconvenient for your agenda.
Fcps’s own data shows that most kids aren’t learning.
That is not what it shows. What it shows is that more kids are getting Ds and Fs. And it’s not the kids who previously got A and B. It’s the kids who only barely ever got D’s because their teachers had way more ability to snag them and sit and make them do SOMETHING. *we* pull those kids over the line. But now they can turn off the meet, leave, ignore the breakout room invite, play video games. Our ability to MAKE them is gone. But grades don’t = learning and kids who normally would fail now failing because we basically can’t hold their hand the entire time doesn’t mean other kids aren’t learning.
Anonymous wrote:We won’t know how much learning loss there has been for elementary until school reopens.
The older kids are earning As and Bs just for showing up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. I will go back when I’m asked to go back, but if they tell me I can teach from home forever I’d happily do that too. My job is to teach, that’s what I’m doing. My job is not to fight leadership about what that teaching should look like.
The idea that I’m a bad teacher because I’m not fighting the FEA rhetoric is ridiculous. I’m not an FEA member, I want nothing to do with it. I just want to write my lessons and teach my students, wherever the location is.
You aren’t teaching if the kids aren’t learning. What you are doing from home right now isn’t teaching.
DP. A lot of kids are learning. We have data that shows this. You don’t get to deny their hard work and progress because it doesn’t fit your narrative. Distance learning isn’t ideal but teachers and kids have been busting their a$$ to make it work. It’s not okay to erase that or deny it because it’s inconvenient for your agenda.
Fcps’s own data shows that most kids aren’t learning.
That is not what it shows. What it shows is that more kids are getting Ds and Fs. And it’s not the kids who previously got A and B. It’s the kids who only barely ever got D’s because their teachers had way more ability to snag them and sit and make them do SOMETHING. *we* pull those kids over the line. But now they can turn off the meet, leave, ignore the breakout room invite, play video games. Our ability to MAKE them is gone. But grades don’t = learning and kids who normally would fail now failing because we basically can’t hold their hand the entire time doesn’t mean other kids aren’t learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. I will go back when I’m asked to go back, but if they tell me I can teach from home forever I’d happily do that too. My job is to teach, that’s what I’m doing. My job is not to fight leadership about what that teaching should look like.
The idea that I’m a bad teacher because I’m not fighting the FEA rhetoric is ridiculous. I’m not an FEA member, I want nothing to do with it. I just want to write my lessons and teach my students, wherever the location is.
You aren’t teaching if the kids aren’t learning. What you are doing from home right now isn’t teaching.
DP. A lot of kids are learning. We have data that shows this. You don’t get to deny their hard work and progress because it doesn’t fit your narrative. Distance learning isn’t ideal but teachers and kids have been busting their a$$ to make it work. It’s not okay to erase that or deny it because it’s inconvenient for your agenda.
Fcps’s own data shows that most kids aren’t learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. I will go back when I’m asked to go back, but if they tell me I can teach from home forever I’d happily do that too. My job is to teach, that’s what I’m doing. My job is not to fight leadership about what that teaching should look like.
The idea that I’m a bad teacher because I’m not fighting the FEA rhetoric is ridiculous. I’m not an FEA member, I want nothing to do with it. I just want to write my lessons and teach my students, wherever the location is.
I'm curious. What grade do you teach? I teach a primary grade and I don't know anybody who would make that statement.
My husband teaches middle school math and likes teaching from home. I told him fcps may offer more virtual learning in the future so go ahead and apply for a job doing it full time if he wants. He would go back whenever but likes it more than he thought.
Middle school math is extremely difficult for the students. My kid who used to
love math has a D and is miserable. Tons of time wasted manipulating slide show tools and whatnot and very little learning time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher. I will go back when I’m asked to go back, but if they tell me I can teach from home forever I’d happily do that too. My job is to teach, that’s what I’m doing. My job is not to fight leadership about what that teaching should look like.
The idea that I’m a bad teacher because I’m not fighting the FEA rhetoric is ridiculous. I’m not an FEA member, I want nothing to do with it. I just want to write my lessons and teach my students, wherever the location is.
You aren’t teaching if the kids aren’t learning. What you are doing from home right now isn’t teaching.
DP. A lot of kids are learning. We have data that shows this. You don’t get to deny their hard work and progress because it doesn’t fit your narrative. Distance learning isn’t ideal but teachers and kids have been busting their a$$ to make it work. It’s not okay to erase that or deny it because it’s inconvenient for your agenda.