Yes, this happens at some schools. |
[mastodon]
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| hvgvuybcrt |
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The PP talking about being expected to teach mini-lessons in FCPS is spot-on. The state objectives for teaching parts of speech and punctuation etc. are clearly outlined, but there aren’t materials. The bigger issue that I have seen in the last 12-15 years is that every teacher in a grade level in elementary is expected to teach the same lessons. The teachers with the most “power” in the grade level make those decisions. So when I as a veteran teacher but new to a school said at a planning meeting with my grade level that we needed to start parts of speech, and the other teachers said it wasn’t necessary, I was overruled. The brand-new teacher didn’t know any better, and I ended up teaching my own lessons on the topic, knowing I’d get dinged if admin found out I was doing something different. I’ll never forget the year the grade level teachers told me we could choose which health unit we wanted as a group for the year and the others could be skipped. They honestly thought that.
Parents need to clearly ask principals about direct instruction for the language arts objectives that are listed on the VDOE website but aren’t explicitly taught. Principals don’t like negative parent feedback. |
| My son started second grade new to fcps and reading a couple grades ahead. He had to start at the first level for second grade (10) and when he finished the last second grade level (12) in March, was told to work on something else during lexia time. No working ahead. |
| My child finished Lexia in first grade. |
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I wish people can tell me the answers to level 21 lexia because its really hard well its not but you have to read the books |
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bro how can your son do that what's his name
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That's not true. The school can't control that because the program starts the students where they tested. My older kids (using Powering Up) both tested at the highest level of Word Study, so they finished it within a few weeks. One child tested at the highest level of Reading Comprehension, and the other child tested at the third highest level of Reading Comprehension, so they were both finished with that section within a few months. The third section of Grammar has taken them both a little longer. My younger child is using the lower program called Core, but she's definitely working above grade level. She will probably finish Core by the end of the year. |