Yeah but what caused that? Maybe what the teacher did in class didn’t help prepare the kid enough? |
Grade inflation is the disconnection. |
Not necessarily. The teacher may not have prepared the students well. The curriculum or lack of one could be to blame. |
They passed.... Don't be so hung up on the pass advanced. Some of the best teachers we've had have been first year from out of state, taught what the kids needed to learn more than the standards |
Hey OP, how does your child do on "standardized" tests in general? Did they sleep well that night? Did they have a bad day? Noisy kid besides them in the testing room? Dial it down. It's an SOL AND it's 7th grade. Your kid passed, and that's really all that matters. I'm telling you now, PLEASE don't put so much stock in an SOL score. Just don't. Focus (in a few years) on stuff like the SAT and ACT - that matters more. |
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I am the OP,
I don't worry my kid. I just wish those 2 scores are aligned better. 95 -> SOL 550 85 -> SOL 500 Something like that. |
Good advice here, OP! I’ll add to save this stress for AP exams. And then keep it to yourself. The kids put enough stress on themselves in HS for AP exams, SAT and ACTs. Or IB tests if you are at an IB school. Really, SOLs don’t matter and they really don’t at all before HS. Even in HS they only need to pass them. |
| I work at a FCPS MS and can report they are teaching to the lowest common denominator. English classes (and all classes) have students from 1st grade reading level to adult, and behavior problems like you wouldn't believe. Teachers are directed to give kids "grace" and as many points as possilbe all the time. 5 paragraph essay? Make it 3 paragraphs instead and give kids "sentence stems" to start every paragraph and sentence. Accept misspelling and incorrect grammar if you think the student is showing "growth." Honestly, "AAP" and "Honors" classes are teaching down to the poorest performing students, there is VERY little rigor and low expectations of students by any measure parents with decent educations would believe if they really knew. Bottom line, your kid's A in English in FCPS MS doesn't equate to a high score on the SOL. Sadly. |
| I have a PhD in English Lit and find some of the SOL questions ridiculous. My daughter’s 7th grade English teacher sent out an entire practice SOL & answer key for us to look over at home and it feels like some of the questions were written by someone with dementia. I don’t know why people blame FCPS/the kids when scores are low without first looking at the test and holding these test writers accountable. |
But, similar to your DC’s excellent experience. That is ‘your experience’. Let people explain their experience. That is why this thread exists. Quit trying to bully and silence people. If their DC had poor English, then everyone knows that was from ‘their’ experience. Geez. |
Thank you. Same on the Math side. -I just reviewed the 7th grade math SOL practice packet and I had issues with how the questions/ materials were presented. I suspect the Test formulation has probably been contracted out and it this point it, the materials can't be refuted. |