Anonymous wrote:Hmm. My guess would be late Friday afternoon before the holiday weekend. Assuming it’s bad news and she wants it to go away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.
Just FYI- schools have not yet received them and it's often mid to late September before they do..... (at least pre-Covid). PARCC really should go- it's too long a test anyways and then it takes ~4 months for schools to get results despite it being mostly computerized now....
Schools have them. 100% can confirm.
Does "embargoed results" come with the instruction to lie to parents about having received them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.
Just FYI- schools have not yet received them and it's often mid to late September before they do..... (at least pre-Covid). PARCC really should go- it's too long a test anyways and then it takes ~4 months for schools to get results despite it being mostly computerized now....
Schools have them. 100% can confirm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.
Just FYI- schools have not yet received them and it's often mid to late September before they do..... (at least pre-Covid). PARCC really should go- it's too long a test anyways and then it takes ~4 months for schools to get results despite it being mostly computerized now....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.
Just FYI- schools have not yet received them and it's often mid to late September before they do..... (at least pre-Covid). PARCC really should go- it's too long a test anyways and then it takes ~4 months for schools to get results despite it being mostly computerized now....
They don't use PARCC for class placement then? What's the point?
I think there would be an argument against using PARCC for class placement because of equity. Not all kids take it, plus what is the goal? To group the more advanced students? DCPS is anti-tracking so of course they don't do this -- if schools do customized class placement, the goal will be to get a mix of kids at all levels in the hopes that the more advanced kids in class will help bring the lagging kids up. I also think any customized class placement tends to be more focused on behavior than academics at the elementary level, with the goal of trying to avoid giving any one teacher a particularly challenging class and to avoid highly combustible student combos.
Individual PARCC scores may be used to identify candidates for an acceleration program (tutoring or after school programming) or if you have a handful of students who are more advanced than their grade cohort, maybe to set out opportunities to pull out and do math or reading with the next grade up for part of the day. But I've never heard of a school using PARCC for class placement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.
Just FYI- schools have not yet received them and it's often mid to late September before they do..... (at least pre-Covid). PARCC really should go- it's too long a test anyways and then it takes ~4 months for schools to get results despite it being mostly computerized now....
They don't use PARCC for class placement then? What's the point?
Anonymous wrote:Pretty sure scores are out but embargoed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.
Just FYI- schools have not yet received them and it's often mid to late September before they do..... (at least pre-Covid). PARCC really should go- it's too long a test anyways and then it takes ~4 months for schools to get results despite it being mostly computerized now....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.
Just FYI- schools have not yet received them and it's often mid to late September before they do..... (at least pre-Covid). PARCC really should go- it's too long a test anyways and then it takes ~4 months for schools to get results despite it being mostly computerized now....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a multi page report with your kid’s scores, how they performed in different sections, how they compare to their peers, etc. it’s not just “Susie got a 4”
The peer comparison is very limited. Nobody takes PARCC anymore so you are just comparing to other kids in DC of which many are low performing.
It doesn’t give you data on national comparison like other more widely used standardized tests.
Very true. I think DC is the only place using PARCC. At its height there were more than 10 states using PARCC including Maryland. So, why do you think it is like that? I would love to know how my kids compare to other kids in other states.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends. If your child is still at the school, then maybe you will get it at back to school night in early to mid September.
If your child has switched schools, then expect a letter in the mail, maybe by the end of September.
Thank you! That's a huge lag after the schools get them, and borderline offensive to send them via snail mail when kids spent so much time taking the tests at computers. Blargh.