Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 4th grader scored a 550 this year. She didn't even hit 500 last year. I'm a HS teacher and my 11th graders are all passing. Which is unusual at my school
I have a high school kid who took it this year and got their first pass advanced on English, I think ever. It was a high pass advanced, over 550. They also got over a 700 on the May SAT in Verbal, which is unheard of.
My kid was SO behind in writing and language arts from covid, like so many others. Those transition years where my other kids switched from writing and analyzing texts like kids to writing and analyzing texts like young adults were all a complete bust, due to the wasted years of covid school and the aftermath.
From my observation, the teachers at the high schools (and probably MS snd elementary) have been busting a$$ the past couple of years to try to catch up the behind students and backfill the numerous holes left from covid school. I know my kid's high school teachers, especially the English and Math teachers, have been making a superhuman effort with kids like mine, who were so woefully behind from missing those 2 critical years of writing instruction, 3 if you include the feral tiktok year back to school. I feel like the hard work of the teachers to right the ship is finally starting to yield fruit, at least with my kid, and the improvement is showing in the test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids both got pass advanced this year. One has never taken an SOL before, the other got pass proficient last year. Sorrynotsorry your kid just didn't do well on the test, it has nothing to do with Benchmark.
Advice from a mom of teens and young adults
Even with the best parents and the best children, you will need to eat a lot of crow over the years as you help transform your kids from children into independent young adults.
It is best not to be too judgmental when your kids are younger and just starting out in school.
17 +/- years of school until you get them out of college and into functional adulthood is a very long time and there will be lots of bumps in the road along the way. It is best not to be too smug right out of the starting gate.
It's also helpful to read the thread you are responding to instead of lecturing people on something that has nothing to do with their post.
I'm not judging anyone except for the lady who thinks that Benchmark directly caused her child to have lower SOL scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids both got pass advanced this year. One has never taken an SOL before, the other got pass proficient last year. Sorrynotsorry your kid just didn't do well on the test, it has nothing to do with Benchmark.
Advice from a mom of teens and young adults
Even with the best parents and the best children, you will need to eat a lot of crow over the years as you help transform your kids from children into independent young adults.
It is best not to be too judgmental when your kids are younger and just starting out in school.
17 +/- years of school until you get them out of college and into functional adulthood is a very long time and there will be lots of bumps in the road along the way. It is best not to be too smug right out of the starting gate.
Anonymous wrote:My kids both got pass advanced this year. One has never taken an SOL before, the other got pass proficient last year. Sorrynotsorry your kid just didn't do well on the test, it has nothing to do with Benchmark.
Anonymous wrote: FCPS keeps removing things from their suggested curriculum. Benchmark doesn’t teach to the SOL. So yeah, unless you have a teacher who knows all of this and can counter it, then students scores would be lower. This should not be a surprise to anyone who follows the decision making practices of the school board, superintendent, and central office.
Anonymous wrote:In her email about continuing the early releases, but on Wednesday Reid said:
For example, in grades K-3, we saw an 11 percentage point increase in students meeting reading benchmarks from fall to winter. In grades 3-6, multi-year trend data shows improved reading performance, with more students meeting or approaching grade-level expectations than in previous years. This progress is significant—and a clear indicator that this approach is working.
So...something's working.
For example, in grades K-3, we saw an 11 percentage point increase in students meeting reading benchmarks from fall to winter. In grades 3-6, multi-year trend data shows improved reading performance, with more students meeting or approaching grade-level expectations than in previous years. This progress is significant—and a clear indicator that this approach is working.
Anonymous wrote:My 4th grader scored a 550 this year. She didn't even hit 500 last year. I'm a HS teacher and my 11th graders are all passing. Which is unusual at my school