Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Knowing all letters is NOT a prerequisite for PK3 but it is helpful for teachers to know how many/which kids already know all their letters.
One of my kids started reading in her PK3 year. Other kid is still learning to name letters and is in PK4.
How did your child who was reading adapt when in PK3? Did they feel the classroom moved at a slower pace for them/or that they knew all that they were learning?
Anonymous wrote:Knowing all letters is NOT a prerequisite for PK3 but it is helpful for teachers to know how many/which kids already know all their letters.
One of my kids started reading in her PK3 year. Other kid is still learning to name letters and is in PK4.
Anonymous wrote:Here are the early childhood learning standards DCPS and charter schools must try to meet.
https://osse.dc.gov/publication/district-columbia-common-core-early-learning-standards-dc-ccels
Anonymous wrote:There's no expectation that kids know all their letters, shapes, colors, etc. when entering DC PK3. That's what mine learned IN PK3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure I understand how he's going to do PK3 twice? How are you swinging this unless he was identified as having special needs?
So he’s currently at the center in a 3s class and will be enrolling in PK3 DC school next fall. His bday is late October so missed the cutoff this year.
Anonymous wrote:Having academic prerequisites for 2 year olds is crazy and developmentally inappropriate. They should be learning how to play with other kids, how to begin to solve problems among themselves, and the very beginning of impulse control/executive function. That's it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure I understand how he's going to do PK3 twice? How are you swinging this unless he was identified as having special needs?
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure I understand how he's going to do PK3 twice? How are you swinging this unless he was identified as having special needs?