Anonymous wrote:Wonder if it has anything to do that they reuse most problems from year to year. Not saying that anyone would cheat, but.........
Anonymous wrote:CC stresses critical thinking,
That's what they would like for you to think. Here is a clue: when you have kids doing things for which they are not developmentally ready, it stifles critical thinking. Just sayin.......
Anonymous wrote:
NOTE: Accommodations were not permitted in NAEP mathematics assessments prior to 1996, and in NAEP reading assessments prior to 1998.
wonder if this has any effect on the rise in test scores cited above??????
Anonymous wrote:CC stresses critical thinking,
That's what they would like for you to think. Here is a clue: when you have kids doing things for which they are not developmentally ready, it stifles critical thinking. Just sayin.......
Anonymous wrote:
This statement is starting to bug me. The education in this country has been going down hill *for decades*. I don't want my kids to have the same curriculum or necessarily the same way of learning that I did 40 yrs ago. That curriculum was meant for the 20th century. Many people who graduated from Ivies 10+ yrs ago probably couldn't get in now with the credentials they had. Times are different. There are certain things my kids really don't need to learn that they did 50 yrs ago.
FWIW - my 1st grader has weekly spelling tests; my 4th grader just had a unit on grammar. They still teach these things, but they don't need to be taught in K.
CC stresses critical thinking, which in the grand scheme of things is probably a more important skill than spelling and grammar.
CC stresses critical thinking,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for writing the "opinion" pieces, I think it's great that young kids are asked to convey what they think about something. Most of the time, what they write makes no sense and come out as gibberish (my DC was in K last year), but I think it's good practice for them to practice their "thinking" skills.
Not a worthwhile activity for a K child. Time would be much better spent developing "thinking" or "opinion" skills verbally. Save the writing for later.
Disagree. Nothing wrong with having kids "write" in K. They can write down exactly the way they verbally say it. Like I said, the writing is gibberish, barely legible, letters turned around, etc... But it's writing practice, none the less, which is important, too.
NCLB started this fad of having kids write before they are really able, and it's tanked their writing skills. Back in the day, we learned to spell and all about proper grammar -- THEN we learned to write.
I'm guessing that you've never heard of Whole Language. This "fad" you refer to started a decade or two before NCLB.
I'm guessing that you've never heard of Whole Language. This "fad" you refer to started a decade or two before NCLB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for writing the "opinion" pieces, I think it's great that young kids are asked to convey what they think about something. Most of the time, what they write makes no sense and come out as gibberish (my DC was in K last year), but I think it's good practice for them to practice their "thinking" skills.
Not a worthwhile activity for a K child. Time would be much better spent developing "thinking" or "opinion" skills verbally. Save the writing for later.
Disagree. Nothing wrong with having kids "write" in K. They can write down exactly the way they verbally say it. Like I said, the writing is gibberish, barely legible, letters turned around, etc... But it's writing practice, none the less, which is important, too.
NCLB started this fad of having kids write before they are really able, and it's tanked their writing skills. Back in the day, we learned to spell and all about proper grammar -- THEN we learned to write.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for writing the "opinion" pieces, I think it's great that young kids are asked to convey what they think about something. Most of the time, what they write makes no sense and come out as gibberish (my DC was in K last year), but I think it's good practice for them to practice their "thinking" skills.
Not a worthwhile activity for a K child. Time would be much better spent developing "thinking" or "opinion" skills verbally. Save the writing for later.
Disagree. Nothing wrong with having kids "write" in K. They can write down exactly the way they verbally say it. Like I said, the writing is gibberish, barely legible, letters turned around, etc... But it's writing practice, none the less, which is important, too.