Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just posted above.
Yep - flip this list 180 degrees and I would happily pay tons more in property taxes.
“No syllabi
No five-paragraph essay writing
No book reports
No textbooks
No weekly vocabulary tests on spelling and usage
No cursive handwriting taught
No ability groupings for maths
No barrage of cobbled-together worksheets from TPT
No discipline
No consequences for cheating
This list doesn’t even make sense. Presumably it lists things you’re upset your public didn’t have (syllabi? textbooks? cursive) but also things you’re mad they DID have (barrage of TPT worksheets?). Which is it, these things are good or bad? Maybe your new private can teach syntax and clear writing.
No consequences for unacceptable behavior“
Enough with the predictable insults. I meant to drop the “no” in front of “barrage.” Yes, this is a list of several public school problems that we left behind. Does your public experience align with mine? If so, how?
The district’s pacing guides are pretty detailed in FCPS. I assume other districts have their pacing too. Aren’t those syllabi? Isn’t advanced math ability grouping? Aren’t reading and math groups within a class a type of ability grouping?
Anonymous wrote:The PP said that she and her family moved. They are no longer local.
Our family did the exact same thing. We made the decision on March 12, 2020. We knew that there would be no political will to open schools again after the "two weeks to stop the spread" were up, plus Trump, Trump, Trump. Put our house on the market after a frenzy of cleaning, painting, mulching and staging. Got an offer straight away and fled for another part of the Commonwealth with excellent, reasonably priced (unlike the D.C. area) privates who loved our kids' stratospheric test scores and excellent grades. Our kids have never been happier.
Anonymous wrote:The LCPS pacing guides were supposed to be outlines of the curricula, not actual course syllabi.
We had honors for all in math and ELA.
So, no to all of your questions.
Anonymous wrote:The LCPS pacing guides were supposed to be outlines of the curricula, not actual course syllabi.
We had honors for all in math and ELA.
So, no to all of your questions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just posted above.
Yep - flip this list 180 degrees and I would happily pay tons more in property taxes.
“No syllabi
No five-paragraph essay writing
No book reports
No textbooks
No weekly vocabulary tests on spelling and usage
No cursive handwriting taught
No ability groupings for maths
No barrage of cobbled-together worksheets from TPT
No discipline
No consequences for cheating
This list doesn’t even make sense. Presumably it lists things you’re upset your public didn’t have (syllabi? textbooks? cursive) but also things you’re mad they DID have (barrage of TPT worksheets?). Which is it, these things are good or bad? Maybe your new private can teach syntax and clear writing.
No consequences for unacceptable behavior“
Enough with the predictable insults. I meant to drop the “no” in front of “barrage.” Yes, this is a list of several public school problems that we left behind. Does your public experience align with mine? If so, how?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm paying $28k per year for my three elementary school aged kids so they don't have to attend the public schools which close all the time when they feel like it. It's a lot of money but it's worth it when the dopamine hits after I post here (in the public school forum) with the word "anonymous" as my name.
Also my kids are thriving
Only $28K for 3 kids? Must not be that great a school, but go on and enjoy those dopamine hits. That’s what it’s all about.
I meant 28k per kid! They are thriving!
Ahhh, there goes the dopamine again!
That’s great, I’m really happy for them. Maybe it’s time for you to stop boasting about about it in a public school forum? It’s kind of obnoxious.
And weird.
I don't think it's so weird. Last year when my kids were online and not thriving, the teacher would say things on the iPad like "today you are going to learn how to do this."
Now, since I play 28k a year, I bet the teachers don't have to say that! My kids just learn!
And they are thriving
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just posted above.
Yep - flip this list 180 degrees and I would happily pay tons more in property taxes.
“No syllabi
No five-paragraph essay writing
No book reports
No textbooks
No weekly vocabulary tests on spelling and usage
No cursive handwriting taught
No ability groupings for maths
No barrage of cobbled-together worksheets from TPT
No discipline
No consequences for cheating
This list doesn’t even make sense. Presumably it lists things you’re upset your public didn’t have (syllabi? textbooks? cursive) but also things you’re mad they DID have (barrage of TPT worksheets?). Which is it, these things are good or bad? Maybe your new private can teach syntax and clear writing.
No consequences for unacceptable behavior“
Enough with the predictable insults. I meant to drop the “no” in front of “barrage.” Yes, this is a list of several public school problems that we left behind. Does your public experience align with mine? If so, how?
Thank you! 28k pet year! Thriving! Dopamine!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just posted above.
Yep - flip this list 180 degrees and I would happily pay tons more in property taxes.
“No syllabi
No five-paragraph essay writing
No book reports
No textbooks
No weekly vocabulary tests on spelling and usage
No cursive handwriting taught
No ability groupings for maths
No barrage of cobbled-together worksheets from TPT
No discipline
No consequences for cheating
This list doesn’t even make sense. Presumably it lists things you’re upset your public didn’t have (syllabi? textbooks? cursive) but also things you’re mad they DID have (barrage of TPT worksheets?). Which is it, these things are good or bad? Maybe your new private can teach syntax and clear writing.
No consequences for unacceptable behavior“
Enough with the predictable insults. I meant to drop the “no” in front of “barrage.” Yes, this is a list of several public school problems that we left behind. Does your public experience align with mine? If so, how?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just posted above.
Yep - flip this list 180 degrees and I would happily pay tons more in property taxes.
“No syllabi
No five-paragraph essay writing
No book reports
No textbooks
No weekly vocabulary tests on spelling and usage
No cursive handwriting taught
No ability groupings for maths
No barrage of cobbled-together worksheets from TPT
No discipline
No consequences for cheating
This list doesn’t even make sense. Presumably it lists things you’re upset your public didn’t have (syllabi? textbooks? cursive) but also things you’re mad they DID have (barrage of TPT worksheets?). Which is it, these things are good or bad? Maybe your new private can teach syntax and clear writing.
No consequences for unacceptable behavior“
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm paying $28k per year for my three elementary school aged kids so they don't have to attend the public schools which close all the time when they feel like it. It's a lot of money but it's worth it when the dopamine hits after I post here (in the public school forum) with the word "anonymous" as my name.
Also my kids are thriving
Only $28K for 3 kids? Must not be that great a school, but go on and enjoy those dopamine hits. That’s what it’s all about.
I meant 28k per kid! They are thriving!
Ahhh, there goes the dopamine again!
That’s great, I’m really happy for them. Maybe it’s time for you to stop boasting about about it in a public school forum? It’s kind of obnoxious.
And weird.
I don't think it's so weird. Last year when my kids were online and not thriving, the teacher would say things on the iPad like "today you are going to learn how to do this."
Now, since I play 28k a year, I bet the teachers don't have to say that! My kids just learn!
And they are thriving
Anonymous wrote:We left FCPS, which is definitely a flaming dumpster, for private ES/MS, but our private ends soon and we probably can't afford private high school. We're planning to move, and decided to be smarter this time and not live in Fairfax. But based on this forum, it seems like every NoVa school district is horrible. Is there one anywhere that isn't? Falls Church, Oakton, Loudoun? Is there a decent public school district anywhere in NoVa?
Some of things we hated about FCPS included absurd amounts of homework, even in ES, a huge bureaucracy with no accountability for administrators (and a lot of BAD admins), a focus on testing, overcrowded classrooms, no personal attention at any age, and a "we don't care" attitude in general. Does that characterize all public schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm paying $28k per year for my three elementary school aged kids so they don't have to attend the public schools which close all the time when they feel like it. It's a lot of money but it's worth it when the dopamine hits after I post here (in the public school forum) with the word "anonymous" as my name.
Also my kids are thriving
Only $28K for 3 kids? Must not be that great a school, but go on and enjoy those dopamine hits. That’s what it’s all about.
I meant 28k per kid! They are thriving!
Ahhh, there goes the dopamine again!
That’s great, I’m really happy for them. Maybe it’s time for you to stop boasting about about it in a public school forum? It’s kind of obnoxious.
And weird.