KittyKitty
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2002
- Messages
- 1,938
This is a sincere question, not snarky. How do you know your kids are falling behind? Is it their grades? Or something else?
Thanks
Thanks
This is a sincere question, not snarky. How do you know your kids are falling behind? Is it their grades? Or something else?
Thanks
This is a sincere question, not snarky. How do you know your kids are falling behind? Is it their grades? Or something else?
Thanks
This is a sincere question, not snarky. How do you know your kids are falling behind? Is it their grades? Or something else?
Thanks
Yes. I have quite a few friends and associates who work in public service roles (ex social workers) or are activists for causes dealing with issues such as child abuse, trafficking, and hunger. They’ve been involved and concerned for these issues for years, way before coronavirus. I haven’t seen them complain about schools being closed, except to point out that the reliance on schools has to change. (As one of them put: food insecurity and abuse doesn’t stop in the summer. If schools have to be open to deal with those issues, why are there breaks?) They’re not advocating for schools to fully open.I don’t disagree with you. However in what I’ve seen, both here and in my community, it’s the “haves” who are complaining the loudest.
It’s not ideal and nobody wants this. And I will acknowledge that everybody’s situation is different, but so many went into with the idea it was terrible, it was destined to fail. Attitude won’t solve everything, but it certainly helps make it better.
Your point might be better made without the condescending tone and before someone says it no I'm not offended. Not to mention the your kids are so smart comment. Plus how do you know they will go onto college and do fine in life?
Kids can be quite adaptable but it doesn't make them an impenetrable shield either especially those who were already in precarious situations. FWIW globally students falling behind in this subject or that subject or in this stage of life is happening, in places with different structures than the U.S. You might want to read up on that.
I don’t know the exact metrics of our district, but I know the failure rate is up. Some of my husband’s students have said they don’t need to try because the school will just pass them like they did in spring. They’re all having a come-to-Jesus moment now that they’ve been told there’s no way for them to pass and they’ll have to retake the class in the future.Last week our district sent out a newsletter with the statistics. 50% of the district’s seniors are failing one or more classes. Minority students are failing more than their white peers.
Oh I agree with you my son in full remote he struggled at the begining but he acually is doing quite well now once getting used to everything.You know what, it's not even just the teachers getting sick because of the spread from school. I work part time in a grocery store and a teen that works there also, got Covid from someone from school. He then came to work not knowing he was sick and got a few co-workers sick. It all snowballs. It's not worth it. Keep your kids home, do remote learning and help them out for a few more months. I would rather my kids stay healthy and put more effort into their learning.
If your kids are flourishing, you should thank your lucky stars. But it's terribly myopic to assume everyone's kids are just like yours. You referenced in your other post how privileged everyone here must be. Now you're showing your own economic privilege to not be even considering the plight of all those kids out there who don't have reliable wifi, dedicated devices or parental assistance because Mom and Dad are out working to keep food on the table. Many kids aren't even logging in for their online school. This is a mess that will have ramifications for years to come.
We go through this every Fall during fire season. Our schools have made the decisions to stay open during even hazardous air quality (with modifications) because the danger to the “have nots” is so great, it’s safer for them at school. And it’s the “haves” who are screaming it’s not safe for kids to be at school.Yes. I have quite a few friends and associates who work in public service roles (ex social workers) or are activists for causes dealing with issues such as child abuse, trafficking, and hunger. They’ve been involved and concerned for these issues for years, way before coronavirus. I haven’t seen them complain about schools being closed, except to point out that the reliance on schools has to change. (As one of them put: food insecurity and abuse doesn’t stop in the summer. If schools have to be open to deal with those issues, why are there breaks?) They’re not advocating for schools to fully open.
I have seen a lot of demands for in-person schooling come from people who, at best, have never shown interest in these issues or, at worst, have actively been against any social nets. Comments I have seen from that last category: “they just had the kids to get tax breaks”; “if you’re on food stamps you shouldn’t have a cell phone”; or my personal favorite that is just so telling: “we shouldn’t have to pay taxes for public schools.” If someone is saying stuff like that, I’m not going to really consider your opinion when it comes to schools being in-person.
Last week our district sent out a newsletter with the statistics. 50% of the district’s seniors are failing one or more classes.
I love how so many parents are blaming their 17/18 year olds failing a class due to it being virtual... if they can't handle some online HS classes how are they going to handle college? Just in case anyone doesn't know there is a lot more independent studying and a lot less hand holding at the university level. And... some of the classes are virtual...
Yes, with all the complaining, it's important to note that SOME of our students are doing better than ever. I'm talking about the fairly large group of kids for whom school isn't a fun place -- those who are a little different, those who are bullied. For them, online learning has removed a problem and is allowing them to focus on academics.Some are doing very well and actually excelling. If there is parental involvement and if the kids do what they are instructed to do, they will learn.
I hear what you're saying: those kids are less likely to have good academic supervision at home, etc., etc., etc. But consider how that would come off: Joey and Sam, since you live in the ghetto and your families have been investigated by DSS, you're coming back in person first ...Those in low income or in unstable homes should be brought back first.
I wish our school board was presented with /working with facts and data. It's pure emotion and anecdotal stories.Oh, believe me, we did that. Parents were going to the school board meetings regularly, impassioned pleas, presenting actual facts and data, asking for the data the board was using the keep the schools closed in return.
Oh, yes, masks are required of students in my public school ... except while actively eating lunch.Public schools absolutely can require masks and protocols of what do to do if you come in contact with someone who is positive.
Yes, I know several teachers who have been hospitalized (and several of their spouses /other family members who have been hospitalized. I know two teachers -- one young 30-something, one 50ish -- who have recovered but are suffering from serious, ongoing complications.Do you actually know teachers who were hospitalized? I mean seriously hospitalized, not just in and out?
Agree. What we're doing now is far from ideal, but to say your kid is ruined /stunted is hyperbole.I don't mean to offend but why are so many people's kids getting destroyed by a "lackluster" year of virtual learning? I keep seeing people saying that due to having to attend online class that their kids will now be both academically and socially stunted.
Agree, but it won't change everything immediately. It'll take time to get everyone vaccinated ... and I think we all know it's a two-shot process, so that requires double compliance ... and then you have to wait a few weeks for the vaccine to fully "take hold" in the body. If pharmacies had it today, and if all the health care workers had been taken care of, it would still take months to get everyone vaccinated.I do think the vaccine will change everything.
Yes, we're doing the same things -- our school is taking good care of our students.We took food to the students via school busses. They provided breakfast and lunch everyday as well as 3 family type meals for dinner. They also put hotspots on the busses for those near the busses so they could have internet. For those who lived outside the area the hotspot reached the district gave those kids hotspots to use at their houses. As most of the students lived in apartment buildings they found that handing out a few hotspots per apartment complex worked.
Eh, school and work have changed significantly-significantly-significantly since Grandma was a student. I don't think it's fair to compare now and then.I'm sorry, I just can't with this post. I wish you could have talked to my Grandma before she died a couple of months ago. Or you can go and talk to my Dad. My grandma(my Mom's Mom) went to school up until 6th grade and then the war started.
The "haves" are always more involved in school at every level -- they make up the PTA, the Athletic Boosters, and they're the parents who attend Meet The Teachers Night and monitor their kids' homework and academic achievement. Paying attention to what's going on in school is a good bit of what helps a kid grow up to become a "have" himself.I don’t disagree with you. However in what I’ve seen, both here and in my community, it’s the “haves” who are complaining the loudest.
Disagree. It's totally possible to deliver the same amount of content, but our average-and-below students simply won't do that quantity of work without someone standing over /monitoring their progress. We have lowered our standards, but it's not about what's actually possible.The other part is the teachers admitting that they have scaled the curriculum WAY back because it is impossible to deliver the same amount of content virtually.
Agree that some kids do better in person, but that's not the same as saying they're doomed to failure online.Some kids just do better in person. And it wasn't for lack of trying. She had a quiet place to work. She had everything she needed. It just wasn't right for her.
Several thoughts:Last week our district sent out a newsletter with the statistics. 50% of the district’s seniors are failing one or more classes. Minority students are failing more than their white peers.
Yeah, not even close to the same thing. Not at any of the Universities any of my kids have attended anyway. My daughter is a mechanical engineering major and says the quality of what they're learning this year compared with last year is not as good. Grades are fine, but she worries if it's going to catch up with her in the upper level classes. Calc 3 online is a booger. I'm sure Diff Eq will be just as fun..I love how so many parents are blaming their 17/18 year olds failing a class due to it being virtual... if they can't handle some online HS classes how are they going to handle college? Just in case anyone doesn't know there is a lot more independent studying and a lot less hand holding at the university level. And... some of the classes are virtual...
Several thoughts:
- The 50% statistic is not very useful unless we know how many students are USUALLY failing a class in a normal semester.
- Thinking about my own experience over the years, few students fail a class, and it is unusual for a student to fail only one class. A more common situation is that a student who is failing is failing all-or-most classes. So I question the wording of the statistic.
- Many schools are allowing students longer periods of make-up time for missed assignments (not a good choice), so a percentage of those failures will "pull it up" at the last minute.
- Sadly, our minority students miss more days and tend towards lower grades even in a normal semester. This is not a Covid problem.
With the number of young people going into education plummeting, it might be the answer. We were having difficulty filling teaching jobs here in the South before Covid hit.It occurs to me though, if all this remote learning is so successful, those who make a living teaching in person school should worry about their future employment. I mean, who needs it, right? Think of all the tax dollars we could save!
I mistrust all statistics because so many people are extremely sloppy while "mathing them up" -- and this 50% flies in the face of what I've seen personally in the past AND this year.I don’t have any reason to mistrust the stat.