Anonymous wrote:OP here- he mostly gets A’s with an occasional B. But I have never heard of retakes in elementary school. One thing I heard though is the teacher went over a question after a recent test which most kids were stumped by and then allowed everyone to ‘fix’ their answers after they had already turned in the tests.. so just wondering if this is common? If so, it would make sense that most kids gets A’s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my class (focus school), about 75% get A’s, but with some tests, it can vary widely. Some of the mid and end of module tests have questions that are written horribly. If there are only 8 questions and 1-2 are written using confusing language, scores can really skew down even if the kids fully understand the concepts. I like quizzes better than the performance matters tests for grades.
However, there are also kids in the class who have no business being in the class who consistently get around 50% on the performance matters tests. I wish I could move them to the grade level class, but I’m not allowed.
If your child is occasionally getting a B or even getting a random C, don’t worry about it. If your child is rarely getting A’s, I’d recommend moving to the grade level class.
Why can’t you have conversation with the school leadership and the kids parents to indicate they are not doing well w/ the pace of the accelerated class and would be better served in the on-level class. Their grades compared to the means consistently should be enough evidence of the problem.
It’s not that big a deal. They can off-ramp into 5 next year. They are still doing math all year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my class (focus school), about 75% get A’s, but with some tests, it can vary widely. Some of the mid and end of module tests have questions that are written horribly. If there are only 8 questions and 1-2 are written using confusing language, scores can really skew down even if the kids fully understand the concepts. I like quizzes better than the performance matters tests for grades.
However, there are also kids in the class who have no business being in the class who consistently get around 50% on the performance matters tests. I wish I could move them to the grade level class, but I’m not allowed.
If your child is occasionally getting a B or even getting a random C, don’t worry about it. If your child is rarely getting A’s, I’d recommend moving to the grade level class.
Why can’t you have conversation with the school leadership and the kids parents to indicate they are not doing well w/ the pace of the accelerated class and would be better served in the on-level class. Their grades compared to the means consistently should be enough evidence of the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my class (focus school), about 75% get A’s, but with some tests, it can vary widely. Some of the mid and end of module tests have questions that are written horribly. If there are only 8 questions and 1-2 are written using confusing language, scores can really skew down even if the kids fully understand the concepts. I like quizzes better than the performance matters tests for grades.
However, there are also kids in the class who have no business being in the class who consistently get around 50% on the performance matters tests. I wish I could move them to the grade level class, but I’m not allowed.
If your child is occasionally getting a B or even getting a random C, don’t worry about it. If your child is rarely getting A’s, I’d recommend moving to the grade level class.
Why can’t you have conversation with the school leadership and the kids parents to indicate they are not doing well w/ the pace of the accelerated class and would be better served in the on-level class. Their grades compared to the means consistently should be enough evidence of the problem.
Anonymous wrote:In my class (focus school), about 75% get A’s, but with some tests, it can vary widely. Some of the mid and end of module tests have questions that are written horribly. If there are only 8 questions and 1-2 are written using confusing language, scores can really skew down even if the kids fully understand the concepts. I like quizzes better than the performance matters tests for grades.
However, there are also kids in the class who have no business being in the class who consistently get around 50% on the performance matters tests. I wish I could move them to the grade level class, but I’m not allowed.
If your child is occasionally getting a B or even getting a random C, don’t worry about it. If your child is rarely getting A’s, I’d recommend moving to the grade level class.