If you’re a school parent you’ll probably agree with me.
School is back. Routine is back. And parents, like us, are back to criticising school procedures.
There are a couple of teaching trends that are really getting parents up in arms now the school year is back.
Things like composite classes.
No two words ever get parents more worked up than those.
Two grades in one class, sometimes more than two grades. For smaller schools it is usually a given. But do bigger schools really need to go down that route?
There is a K/1 in our school this year and while I’m sure it was a numbers game, I definitely was relieved my kindergartner son was not in this class.
Other parents in our office agreed.
Shauna, in particularly was quite concerned, “All the parents hate them," she said, "I would worry the teachers would concentrate on the little kids and the older grade would be left behind.”
Our resident teacher, Valentina assured us we were worried for no reason.
“Students learn and mature at different rates. Teachers are trained in differentiated learning strategies so that they are able to cater for the different learning needs of each student. For this reason, students in a composite class are no better/worse off than those in a single year class.”
But it’s not just composite classes getting parents talking. There’s also group class arrangements that have contributed to the b*tching at the school gate after the bell goes.
A few years ago, my son’s kindy class made a group class arrangement where two teachers put their classes together in one big classroom. Otherwise know as an "open-plan classroom". 36 kids to two teachers. I didn’t mind it and it didn’t seem to bother the kids.