My 6th grader was not recommended any full novel/book title to read in their school. But DC reads at home books related to their interest (science, space, etc).
Can people please share the titles of the full novels/books that their six graders are reading in school? Even if the schools are not properly following the curriculum, I am interested in getting those same books/novels for my 6th grader read and catchup now through the summer. Thank you. |
What? My kids do lots of reading outside of ELA in their elementary school, including in writing, science and social studies... but not (typically) of novels. I realize they have more academic periods per day in middle school, but I think the 1 hour/day devoted to ELA / English is roughly the same, no? |
My kid read Hatchet last year in 4th grade at a charter. Surprised Basis has it in 6th grade, I thought it was supposed to be advanced. |
You sound really dumb. Obviously a book can be taught at different grade levels in different ways. Please sit down and be quiet. |
Why is this thread becoming "my elementary schooler is more advanced than your middle schooler." This has the potential to be a very very rational, factual, unemotional thread where people simply list the books on the 6th grade syllabus. Let's do it! |
DCPS Grade 6: Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry- Mildred Taylor, Tuck Everlasting- Natalie Babbitt Inside Out and Back Again- Thanhha Lai |
Finnegans Wake, Gravity’s Rainbow, and Infinite Jest. |
BASIS students usually finish all of Jane Austin in 4th grade so the school likes to mix it up later. |
*fifth grade |
O basileus of learnleap halls,
Where chalkdust dreams a-dance in sprawls, Throughever corridors of mindmaze keen, We BASIS DC, we scene unseen. Triptrickle trekkers of theorem trail, Sinesigh, coscoo, in Pascal veil, Ah, ring-a-bell for the Redbrick keep, Where syllabusts sow what mem’ries reap. Eureka! cried young STEM-o’-mine, In labs of fire and liquid line, Kombucha’d botany fizzing brains, Artpop essays in fractal chains. Quizzico! cried Socratic sprites, Sprawling out in multiple-choice nights, Scantron’d fate in #2 grey, Yet still we danced the Platonic way. Oh, teach-think twain in tweeded tones, Res cogitat’ in mobile phones, Flipped-class flotsam, code of lore, Kafka in gym, Newton on floor. Oh hallpass-waltz through Lockelandia, Wunderkinder in polyglottia, Drumroll descendeth! The deans convene, To rubricate fate in rubescent sheen. Salut the halls where gnarls go neat, Where minds did warp and never fleet, And all the grades that ever be Come waltzing back to BASIS DC. |
“ Maître Corbeau, sur un arbre perché,
Tenait en son bec un fromage. Maître Renard, par l’odeur alléché, Lui tint à peu près ce langage : «Hé ! bonjour, Monsieur du Corbeau. Que vous êtes joli ! que vous me semblez beau ! Sans mentir, si votre ramage Se rapporte à votre plumage, Vous êtes le Phénix des hôtes de ces bois.»” |
7th Deal: Warriors Don’t Cry, Animal Farm, and two more I think. Underwhelming |
Yes-BASIS 6th grade English is reading 3 novels but spending lots of time diving deeper into to them as well as other ELA topics and texts. In addition, the kids read a significant amount in their linguistics, physics, chemistry, biology, world history, and pre-algebra classes plus whatever the other electives are (PE plus visual art/music/theater). I don’t see any shortage of reading for my child. In fact, I’m glad that they’re not being pushed to read too much more. My child used to love reading for fun, but there’s just a certain limit. We all hit with reading so much throughout the day. I hope, is that we can do so more fun reading in the summer. |
If it makes you feel any better. I have one in 57K private and one rising 6th in public. My public kid has read more novels and written more papers than private who is a grade above. They read but for the fun of it. All she has to do is short "reading responses" that look to me like 4th grade level. The school is prestigious and rediculously expensive... and so far, the public education has been very comparable and in many ways, better... and free. I encourage my kids to read for fun and if your kid isn't doing that yet, work on it this summer on library visits. |