Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What crappy teaching. The teacher should allow your child to read what interests him at home, so that reading continues to be as fun as possible.
Ask for exactly that, OP. Is there any testing score you can based your argument on?
PP here, the one with the 97% comment.
I'm not a big fan of early elementary homework, but we're talking about a reading assignment of 76 words, that OP's kid apparently read fluently. Surely he still has time to read other things.
I've heard of teachers trying to limit everything students read to books that are on level, and that's wrong, but sending home one text at a time that a kid can read fluently is not anywhere close to the same thing.
OP here. I'm just hoping this is what the teacher is doing, and not that my child isn't reading for his teacher as he reads for me. I'm afraid he might be shy to read for her (afraid he will get a word wrong or something.) Though I ask and he says he reads the same kind of books with his teacher and "never slips up" on words.
How often is he "slipping up" when he reads with you?
At school, his independent reading and some of the reading he does with support should be texts where he's stopping to problem solve less than 5% of the time. That includes words someone has to help him with, and words where he figures it out himself, but the strategy (e.g. missing the word and then self correcting, or sounding a word out, or going back to reread a sentence to try a word) stops the flow of the reading.
Some of the texts he reads with support should be one level up from there, so likely an E, or maybe an F.
That doesn't mean that he shouldn't have experience with a wider variety of texts when it's his choice what to read. In those situations, he should read whatever he enjoys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What crappy teaching. The teacher should allow your child to read what interests him at home, so that reading continues to be as fun as possible.
Ask for exactly that, OP. Is there any testing score you can based your argument on?
PP here, the one with the 97% comment.
I'm not a big fan of early elementary homework, but we're talking about a reading assignment of 76 words, that OP's kid apparently read fluently. Surely he still has time to read other things.
I've heard of teachers trying to limit everything students read to books that are on level, and that's wrong, but sending home one text at a time that a kid can read fluently is not anywhere close to the same thing.
OP here. I'm just hoping this is what the teacher is doing, and not that my child isn't reading for his teacher as he reads for me. I'm afraid he might be shy to read for her (afraid he will get a word wrong or something.) Though I ask and he says he reads the same kind of books with his teacher and "never slips up" on words.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What crappy teaching. The teacher should allow your child to read what interests him at home, so that reading continues to be as fun as possible.
Ask for exactly that, OP. Is there any testing score you can based your argument on?
PP here, the one with the 97% comment.
I'm not a big fan of early elementary homework, but we're talking about a reading assignment of 76 words, that OP's kid apparently read fluently. Surely he still has time to read other things.
I've heard of teachers trying to limit everything students read to books that are on level, and that's wrong, but sending home one text at a time that a kid can read fluently is not anywhere close to the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:
What crappy teaching. The teacher should allow your child to read what interests him at home, so that reading continues to be as fun as possible.
Ask for exactly that, OP. Is there any testing score you can based your argument on?
Anonymous wrote:
What crappy teaching. The teacher should allow your child to read what interests him at home, so that reading continues to be as fun as possible.
Ask for exactly that, OP. Is there any testing score you can based your argument on?
Anonymous wrote:My son's teacher sends home these Scholastic Guided Reading readers nightly, and wants feedback on the level of challenge. The first books she sent home were super easy, so I let her know they were "no trouble". She's sent home more difficult books, but they are still all very easy, I needed to help with one or two words on the last book (book in question had 76 words and too many "patterns" which he blows through), but I wouldn't say my child was "challenged".
Maybe I am overthinking this, but I feel weird always sending back feedback that says "easy" or "really no trouble". I'm wondering if my child reads with as much ease at school, or if he clams up. Maybe that's why the teacher is sending the easy books? (For what it is worth, we are reading F-G readers at home, and the teacher is sending D.) Is the teacher eye rolling at my comments, thinking I'm crazy? Do I mention this, or just continue as we are. I don't want to come off as if my child is smarter than he is, or that he needs special attention.
What would you do?