Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Today he went home with pairs of numbers for which he had written the signs for "greater than" or "less than". As in 17<53... Homework was breaking down single digits like 7 into 2+5, or 3+4... Gaaah! He could have done this 2 years ago. It's insane.
To clarify, I don't have much of a problem with the curriculum, although it could definitely be way more challenging (I went to school in France and the UK, and experienced much more rigorous content).
I do have a problem with the seemingly purposeful brakes to acceleration and differentiation put in place with 2.0. I talked to the teacher at the beginning of term, knowing this would be problem, but there are limits to what she can do.
This is very interesting to me. So are you saying that it's insane that 1st graders are doing addition, because your child learned addition in preschool? My child is in 1st grade also and it seems age-appropriate to me to be doing addition, subtraction, and word problems. I'm not trying to antagonize, just to assess what others think is age-appropriate.
Anonymous wrote:
Today he went home with pairs of numbers for which he had written the signs for "greater than" or "less than". As in 17<53... Homework was breaking down single digits like 7 into 2+5, or 3+4... Gaaah! He could have done this 2 years ago. It's insane.
To clarify, I don't have much of a problem with the curriculum, although it could definitely be way more challenging (I went to school in France and the UK, and experienced much more rigorous content).
I do have a problem with the seemingly purposeful brakes to acceleration and differentiation put in place with 2.0. I talked to the teacher at the beginning of term, knowing this would be problem, but there are limits to what she can do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous.
Just visited my son's 1st grade class yesterday.
A lot of children (like mine) know the stuff already and act out because they are bored.
Some children struggle to master content because they get distracted by the kids who are bored.
And the poor teacher (who is a good teacher and I like her) can't differentiate the curriculum adequately, with 27 kids in the class plus an aide in the morning.
I wanted to like the public school system so much! We are in Bethesda, a 3 minute walk from the ES.
But regretfully it is not working for my son. He is wasting his time 100%.
Just out of curiousity, what is your child doing in math?
Today he went home with pairs of numbers for which he had written the signs for "greater than" or "less than". As in 17<53... Homework was breaking down single digits like 7 into 2+5, or 3+4... Gaaah! He could have done this 2 years ago. It's insane.
To clarify, I don't have much of a problem with the curriculum, although it could definitely be way more challenging (I went to school in France and the UK, and experienced much more rigorous content).
I do have a problem with the seemingly purposeful brakes to acceleration and differentiation put in place with 2.0. I talked to the teacher at the beginning of term, knowing this would be problem, but there are limits to what she can do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous.
Just visited my son's 1st grade class yesterday.
A lot of children (like mine) know the stuff already and act out because they are bored.
Some children struggle to master content because they get distracted by the kids who are bored.
And the poor teacher (who is a good teacher and I like her) can't differentiate the curriculum adequately, with 27 kids in the class plus an aide in the morning.
I wanted to like the public school system so much! We are in Bethesda, a 3 minute walk from the ES.
But regretfully it is not working for my son. He is wasting his time 100%.
Just out of curiousity, what is your child doing in math?
Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous.
Just visited my son's 1st grade class yesterday.
A lot of children (like mine) know the stuff already and act out because they are bored.
Some children struggle to master content because they get distracted by the kids who are bored.
And the poor teacher (who is a good teacher and I like her) can't differentiate the curriculum adequately, with 27 kids in the class plus an aide in the morning.
I wanted to like the public school system so much! We are in Bethesda, a 3 minute walk from the ES.
But regretfully it is not working for my son. He is wasting his time 100%.