Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
No. It has always been a healthy mix in my kids’ classrooms.
Ditto. SOLs are not broken out by classroom in the data. Please elaborate first PP.
They try to cluster kids with like abilities, so there will he a handful of high achievers grouped together in each of several classrooms. They will not put them all in a single class.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
No. It has always been a healthy mix in my kids’ classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
No. It has always been a healthy mix in my kids’ classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
No. It has always been a healthy mix in my kids’ classrooms.
I never knew who was 'pass advanced' or not -- if you do know then that is weird IMO. However, looking back, the kids who were getting all As in middle school (the honor roll lists are posted at school) seemed to be kids who had been spread out across the classes in our ES. I have one kid who is ID'd as gifted for all subjects and another just for math. Both seemed to be appropriately challenged throughout ES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
No. It has always been a healthy mix in my kids’ classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
Anonymous wrote:Have you noticed most of the SOL Advanced pass students in the same classroom?
Anonymous wrote:If you want this kind of differentiation, you’re in the wrong county.