Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's an easy way to tell if your student is receiving accelerated math or not - look at their last report card. There's a box that will note they are being graded on above grade level standards. Our third grader is.
OP can correct me if I'm wrong, but OP is looking to see not if a kid is in advanced math, but if the current year 3rd grade advanced math curriculum is still accelerated the way it was in prior years. As you can see on this thread, reports are mixed and contradictory. Some people are claiming that the current 3rd grade advanced math standards still have kids go to half of 4th, while others are saying it's just extensions on general education. The report card checkbox won't answer that question. Only talking with school personnel probably will, because this is new this year with the new math standards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's an easy way to tell if your student is receiving accelerated math or not - look at their last report card. There's a box that will note they are being graded on above grade level standards. Our third grader is.
OP can correct me if I'm wrong, but OP is looking to see not if a kid is in advanced math, but if the current year 3rd grade advanced math curriculum is still accelerated the way it was in prior years. As you can see on this thread, reports are mixed and contradictory. Some people are claiming that the current 3rd grade advanced math standards still have kids go to half of 4th, while others are saying it's just extensions on general education. The report card checkbox won't answer that question. Only talking with school personnel probably will, because this is new this year with the new math standards.
Anonymous wrote:3rd. By the end of 5th grade they'll be a year ahead.
Anonymous wrote:There's an easy way to tell if your student is receiving accelerated math or not - look at their last report card. There's a box that will note they are being graded on above grade level standards. Our third grader is.