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I believe the AAP kids get short changed when it comes to grammar, and suspect it is true for much of FCPS. Both my kids were lucky and had a 9th grade English teacher that drove the concepts home and turned them into great writers.
By and large FCPS teachers try to accomplish the best they can with the fad of the day solution like NoRedInk but I guess the overhead at Gatehouse needs to feel like they are contributing when in reality they only make things worse. Hope I got through this without making too many grammatical errors.
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My class is 2026 kid is actually better off than my class of 2028 kid (rising 8th grader). No doubt everyone was horribly impacted, but at least 2026 kids received elementary instruction before many of the “new” reading/writing changes happened. |
What changes happened that made a difference between the class of ‘26 and ‘28? I’m an ES teacher and there weren’t really any changes until the science of reading changes over the past year or two which led to more focus on phonics and phonemic awareness |
| Elimination of homework |
English teacher here. There isn’t really any homework needed for this content beyond reading WHICH kids should be doing at home at least 30 minutes a day, which almost none of my students do. If you think your class of 2028 kid isn’t doing well with reading/writing/grammar, more homework isn’t really the solution to that. You ensuring that at home they read more frequently and a variety of text lengths and genres and mediums is. Yes there need to be changes made to the reading and writing curriculum, as I’ve mentioned throughout this thread, but truly, homework as practice really only applies to math, which requires consistent practice to master those concepts. The other content areas would be greatly enhanced not by more assignments at home but by more kids reading which builds their skills in using text features, vocabulary, reading stamina, awareness of what “good writing” looks and sounds like, and most importantly, gives them ways to connect what they read with other texts and their own experiences and what they see in the world. |
My kid just completed AAP 6th and they did a ton of writing this past year and did a lot with grammar and vocabulary. |
my kid just completed AAP 6th and they did very little writing, did not have reading groups, did a ton of group project slide shows, and I never saw a grammar or vocabulary or spelling worksheet come home. |
| My DC of grade 5 has not had any explicit instruction with grammar. They have not even taught them the parts of speech. The kids spelling is also negatively impacted by not practicing proper usage of homophones. There was NO vocabulary in 5th grade. This was a letdown from 4th grade. Their reading group only read 1 book the entire year last year. |
| Its reading/writing workshop is awful. |
My younger one (‘28) came of reading age under Lucy Calkins, whereas my 2026 kid did not. We have actually since moved, and Science of Reading is not even incorporated or acknowledged in our new school system. |
Well this is clearly teacher dependent. The AAP curriculum includes vocab and grammar (Michael Clay Thompson) and they had daily word study/spelling block for 15 minutes. They wrote a memoir, a literary nonfiction piece, newspaper article, poetry, research project, historical fiction and plays. They also wrote a DBQ essay and had many open ended assignments with writing. |
| My kid learned some but improved greatly while taking Latin in HS. |
March 2020 through June 2021. |
No red ink is worthless for kids who don't have a basic understanding of grammar and parts of speech, especially since many teachers use it in lieu of grammar instruction instead of as a supplement. |
Teacher PP. To be fair, this IS the grammar instruction the county wants them to use. Why? Because they paid for it and it tracks data which is what districts want. Data data data. How many minutes did they use it? How much did they grow? The issue is as you say, it is not enough for standalone writing instruction. It isn’t how kids learn grammar. I also HATE how the program can’t be leveled by vocab and they create examples using the interests the kids have to choose from their provided (outdated) list. So a kid randomly selects The Simpsons and then all the questions say stuff like “Santa’s Little Helper wanted to kayak in the Niagara Falls.” Okay. The kid has no idea Santa’s Little Helper is a dog and therefore a name and the subject of the sentence. If they’ve never kayaked, this word is unknown to them. Why use niche vocab like that? I used NRI once as a baseline diagnostic and it said nobody knew what adjectives are. I was so confused til I looked at the results: the questions asking the kids to identify adjectives all used pronouns as adjectives. Like “Mrs Smith took her painting home.” In this example, her is an adjective but that’s sneaky and tricky for no reason because most kids associate “her” with a pronoun and an adjective with a more vivid descriptor. Ugh I hate No Red Ink so much. |