Anonymous wrote:It has been almost 40 years so I do not recall the highest level of reading in my kindergarten class.
I can tell you that I was so excited to be a reader so I could go into Mrs.Small's class with the Raggedy Ann curtains for reading time, instead of Mrs. Higginbotham's class with the non readers or the other teacher where the kids who didn't know their letters went.
Mrs. Small was the only teacher with Raggedy Ann curtains, and I was so sad to have Mrs. Higginbotham for my main teacher because she had boring decorations in her room like Sesame Street which was for babies.
My most vivid and best memory of kindergarten was the day I was sent to Mrs. Small's Raggedy Ann room for reading time.
Well, that and the day is was my turn to turn the projector for the Curious George movie and the day Mrs. Higginbotham taught us to make a swan out of the number two and a lion out of the number five during math class.
They trump the one bad memory of my first day of school when Mrs. Higginbotham accidentally put me in the walker line when I was supposed to ride the bus home.
I tested as a highly gifted child from a very well regarded pediatric neurologist, and those are the only lasting memories I have from kindergarten.
Translation, Larla will be okay no matter how high the reading groups go in kindergarten.
Really and truly.
Anonymous wrote:It has been almost 40 years so I do not recall the highest level of reading in my kindergarten class.
I can tell you that I was so excited to be a reader so I could go into Mrs.Small's class with the Raggedy Ann curtains for reading time, instead of Mrs. Higginbotham's class with the non readers or the other teacher where the kids who didn't know their letters went.
Mrs. Small was the only teacher with Raggedy Ann curtains, and I was so sad to have Mrs. Higginbotham for my main teacher because she had boring decorations in her room like Sesame Street which was for babies.
My most vivid and best memory of kindergarten was the day I was sent to Mrs. Small's Raggedy Ann room for reading time.
Well, that and the day is was my turn to turn the projector for the Curious George movie and the day Mrs. Higginbotham taught us to make a swan out of the number two and a lion out of the number five during math class.
They trump the one bad memory of my first day of school when Mrs. Higginbotham accidentally put me in the walker line when I was supposed to ride the bus home.
I tested as a highly gifted child from a very well regarded pediatric neurologist, and those are the only lasting memories I have from kindergarten.
Translation, Larla will be okay no matter how high the reading groups go in kindergarten.
Really and truly.
Anonymous wrote:What's the point of reading early if they don't understand? It doesn't encourage reading for pleasure. Better to wait until they learn because they are motivated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is from 2013. OP's kid is in 3rd grade now.
I thought this was an interesting thread and just read all the way through it. I have one of those kids who started reading at 4, was reading short chapter books in K and is now reading long chapter books in 1st. I hear a lot about how early reading is detrimental for kids. I will say that my DS definitely could "read" and decode far beyond what he could comprehend, but that is catching up.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is from 2013. OP's kid is in 3rd grade now.
Anonymous wrote:I love this story from my friend this weekend. She was asking her DC about the reading groups. Child responded "Mom, I'd really rather not tell you. we aren't suppose to talk about everybody's reading level. It can be form of bullying"
My friend and I laughed hard. Our kids are being taught to MYOB and if they don't it's bullying.
All of DCUM are bullies then!
Anonymous wrote:Do not freak out about this. My DD was a 4 at the end of kindergarten -- right where she was supposed to be for the benchmarks. In 1st grade she "made amazing progress" and was about a year ahead by the end -- why? B/c I started coaching her to read! I didn't know I was supposed to be doing that in K!
Now that she's in 4th, she's still a year ahead and in the top reading group.
Bottom line -- kindergarten reading level means almost nothing.
Anonymous wrote:8th grade, but I'm the teacher so I suppose that doesn't count.