| No thats silly. A parent can simply decline those classes. |
Just another perspective—enrolling in a literacy class might be exactly what this child needs right now. I know dropping an elective is disappointing, but if it provides the targeted support to help her build foundational skills, it could make a big difference in the long run. |
| She should just do the retake. She probably only missed passing by 1-2 questions. Thats it. If she gets a 400+, it will boost her self confidence. |
They have that right, but with the requirements of the Virginia Literacy Act, a kid who failed the reading SOL will get pulled constantly to undergo further testing and progress monitoring. The student could fall even further behind if they are constantly being pulled from classes so the school can meet the mandates of the Virginia Literacy Act. |
She could use the support at this point. |
I don’t believe so- it should be a given, a skill/strategy that all students should learn and know. |
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What region is your DD in?
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1) Have her do the retake. It might have been an off day or topics she was unfamiliar with in the passages. Only kids who were close are allowed to retake so your child probably only missed a few questions. 2) Please don’t contact anyone posting on this anonymous board. Use the FCPS family resource center, your school, or a local learning center. 3) The only schools with summer remediation this year are Title I schools because we don’t have the funding for it. -A reading specialist. |
| As a high school literacy teacher I just want to say that if she retakes a 389, it could go either way. It’s only a few questions, so passing is possible. If she doesn’t, and they put her into a literacy support elective, please don’t opt out of it. The SOL is *not* a hard test, so if kids can’t pass it, even with retakes, they legitimately could use reading intervention. |
| Did you ask your daughter if she tried and read the questions on the reading SOL? It seems obvious but my son failed one year and when I spoke to him he said he rushed through it and didn’t read most of them. I did have him sit for the retake and told him to take it seriously and he did significantly better. You know your kid, does she need help with reading or did she likely rush through these tests? |
| My son failed the math SOL each time in 4th and 5th grade. Each summer following that he worked with a math tutor who was a teacher in FCPS. It really made a difference. |
Agreed. -Former FCPS Middle School Literacy Teacher |
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A passing proficient grade on the SOL is effectively 67%, that would be a D. I would be worried if my kid had a D on a test or in a class. Pass Advanced is an 83%. These are not hard tests, they should be manageable for a child that is on grade level. I would be concerned with any score in the low 400s.
OP: What have her iReady scores been the past few years? If she has been falling under the 70th percentile on iReady and she has been in the low 400s on her past SOLS, I would be looking for help. I think a tutor is a great place to start. If the school offers literacy classes, take the help. |
| Not sure why anyone (especially a teacher) would recommend against the MS Literacy. It may be exactly what this child needs. |
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OP here. I’d really like to revisit my first question and what I came looking for advice on in this forum… please.
What tutoring programs would you recommend for a sixth grader that needs remediation in reading and math? Mathnasium? Any of the others? What about for reading? Is working with an FCPS teacher from the parent resource list better? Thanks! |