Anonymous wrote:My son scored almost the same as his last years fall I-ready tests in reading and math. AAP 4th grade. So he didn’t advance in any category for an entire year, and actually scored lower in two of the math categories. Really disheartening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are parents really helping their kids take tests? Is that really happening???
I'm a teacher and I have kids score years ahead of their grade level on iReady. It doesn't matter how many times I tell parents that students need to take tests on their own. They still help them. We do these tests online during class and I see parents sitting next to them telling them answers. The district just wants data. It doesn't matter if it is valid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are parents really helping their kids take tests? Is that really happening???
Yes. My friend teaches 1st and has kids who don’t know letter sounds and can’t read but scored 99% on MAP. Parents are doing it. Scores for all tests are invalid if done at home,
Anonymous wrote:Are parents really helping their kids take tests? Is that really happening???
Anonymous wrote:Our DS who is being pulled out of class for advanced math this year and last year scored in 92md percentile last year on iReady. This year he received scores of just "at grade levek" this fall. We didn't "help" him at all on the exam.
I was surprised and looked at the 2020-2021 grading scale issued in May of this year -- by that guide his math score should have actually been in 99th percentile, it was listed as 85th. Does this reflect them having to redo the grading scale due to unexpected jump in scores this fall (which I suspect has a lot to do with kids taking test at home with someone providing assistance behind them?)
Any teachers able to comment on this?
Anonymous wrote:Are parents really helping their kids take tests? Is that really happening???