Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Math tests should NOT be given on an app. No wonder American kids are so bad at math. My kids are older but went through APS schools and got a great education, especially in math. They ended up going to TJ and are now in STEM careers.
But I could see them having huge problems with taking a test this way. Only people who are not intrinsically good at math would think this is a good idea. Or they're just lazy. How do they see the work kids do to get the answer? Often the work will be right but the kid will make an arithmetic error at some point which yields the wrong answer.
Does every school district do this now?
The kids have paper to do the work on. Only the answers are entered in the app. Then as far as I know the paper work is then turned it. Its kind of like using a scan tron but click an answer online vs filling in a bubble.
Curious how this works. Is the paper just blank scratch paper or an actual printed test with questions? Does the paper get marked up and returned to students to review their errors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Math tests should NOT be given on an app. No wonder American kids are so bad at math. My kids are older but went through APS schools and got a great education, especially in math. They ended up going to TJ and are now in STEM careers.
But I could see them having huge problems with taking a test this way. Only people who are not intrinsically good at math would think this is a good idea. Or they're just lazy. How do they see the work kids do to get the answer? Often the work will be right but the kid will make an arithmetic error at some point which yields the wrong answer.
Does every school district do this now?
The kids have paper to do the work on. Only the answers are entered in the app. Then as far as I know the paper work is then turned it. Its kind of like using a scan tron but click an answer online vs filling in a bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Math tests should NOT be given on an app. No wonder American kids are so bad at math. My kids are older but went through APS schools and got a great education, especially in math. They ended up going to TJ and are now in STEM careers.
But I could see them having huge problems with taking a test this way. Only people who are not intrinsically good at math would think this is a good idea. Or they're just lazy. How do they see the work kids do to get the answer? Often the work will be right but the kid will make an arithmetic error at some point which yields the wrong answer.
Does every school district do this now?
Anonymous wrote:My child is in the 6th grade at DHMS. After helping her study for two tests this weekend, and realizing the only materials are in game-like apps, I looked at her APS iPad usage, and she's on it during almost all of the day. I thought maybe they were using it just to upload materials to Canvas, or while the teacher was working with small groups, but this looks like it's all on the iPad, unless she's in PE or at lunch. Math looks almost entirely on the iPad, she has a few pieces of paper in her binder but not much. For the two tests she had, the studying seemed unhelpful in that it was one question a screen at a time, and then the question disappeared and you could never go back to the answer to actually learn the material. They were cute games, but not helpful. Is this the nature of the beast in middle school in 2023? Or will it get better as the year goes on? I don't even need text books, but there has to be some kind of lecture, take some notes or complete a study guide, review the materials handed out, something other than what is on Canvas, right? Her grades are ultimately fine right now, because a lot seems to be content they had in the 4th and 5th grades, but I imagine at some point there has to be more, please tell me this happens? Please?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a great idea -- asking for paper test. I think too this all makes me understand I need to go into Canvas and start printing off those slides and study guides.
Paper tests are usually only given if it is a 504 or IEP accommodation. SOLs and other standardized tests on on the computer, so they want students to get used to the format.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a great idea -- asking for paper test. I think too this all makes me understand I need to go into Canvas and start printing off those slides and study guides.
Paper tests are usually only given if it is a 504 or IEP accommodation. SOLs and other standardized tests on on the computer, so they want students to get used to the format.
Anonymous wrote:That's a great idea -- asking for paper test. I think too this all makes me understand I need to go into Canvas and start printing off those slides and study guides.
Anonymous wrote:My child is in the 6th grade at DHMS. After helping her study for two tests this weekend, and realizing the only materials are in game-like apps, I looked at her APS iPad usage, and she's on it during almost all of the day. I thought maybe they were using it just to upload materials to Canvas, or while the teacher was working with small groups, but this looks like it's all on the iPad, unless she's in PE or at lunch. Math looks almost entirely on the iPad, she has a few pieces of paper in her binder but not much. For the two tests she had, the studying seemed unhelpful in that it was one question a screen at a time, and then the question disappeared and you could never go back to the answer to actually learn the material. They were cute games, but not helpful. Is this the nature of the beast in middle school in 2023? Or will it get better as the year goes on? I don't even need text books, but there has to be some kind of lecture, take some notes or complete a study guide, review the materials handed out, something other than what is on Canvas, right? Her grades are ultimately fine right now, because a lot seems to be content they had in the 4th and 5th grades, but I imagine at some point there has to be more, please tell me this happens? Please?