Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the kids talk. I tell mine not to. Teachers should not be giving prizes.
Why not? We certainly recognize individual achievement in athletics with Trophy's and praise. Why should academics be any different? Should we stop announcing who won a race because the other runners might feel bad?
Anonymous wrote:All the kids talk. I tell mine not to. Teachers should not be giving prizes.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- Since 2nd or 3rd grade, my kids and their classmates have been highly aware that the score pops up and all talk about it and ask each other. I'm calm just feeling this isn't necessary or healthy. None of us found out the scores of our standardized tests.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- Since 2nd or 3rd grade, my kids and their classmates have been highly aware that the score pops up and all talk about it and ask each other. I'm calm just feeling this isn't necessary or healthy. None of us found out the scores of our standardized tests.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- Since 2nd or 3rd grade, my kids and their classmates have been highly aware that the score pops up and all talk about it and ask each other. I'm calm just feeling this isn't necessary or healthy. None of us found out the scores of our standardized tests.
Anonymous wrote:At my child's ES, their MAP test scores would show up on the computer as soon as they were finished - so then the kids all talked about and compared their scores. Now in middle school, it's even worse since some of the teachers give a prize for the highest score or call out a child who got a high score. Is anyone else bothered by this?
MAP tests feel different than a class test and I don't see why the kids need to know their scores. The children who didn't score as high feel crummy about themselves and the high scorers who have been doted on by the teacher risk getting blowback from possibly jealous peers.
Does anyone know if it's a county-wide policy that the scores come up automatically or have our ES and MS just done it this way?
Thanks