Anonymous wrote:Even if your child is failing miserably it can be pretty useless.
I have a relative who has a child in the same school as mine but is in a different class and we compared report cards over the phone last night.
Her daughter is doing very well, is always completing work, getting it right, and is in the highest reading group and math group but got a bunch of Is in core subjects. My child is really struggling. He's in the bottom reading group and can't seem to get his work done. My child got almost all Ps. I know her daughter very well as she is always over at our house and I can tell you that she is more than a year ahead of our son in almost everything.
But to look at these two report cards you'd have no idea of that. I think I was honestly more upset than she was because I had really hoped the report card would highlight specific areas we could work on.
Anonymous wrote:
The teacher can only know what your DD knows if your child is able to demonstrate it consistently. Classwork is usually one major way for a student to "show what they know", especially in K. I think that may be something you might want to work with your DD on, because I'm not sure how the teacher can be expected to assess skills that aren't being demonstrated somehow through a final work product.
Cooperation and staying on task are hard for many kids in kindergarten, luckily the report card from K really isn't very important in the grand scheme of things and it's more about instilling good habits and a strong foundation for future academic success.

Anonymous wrote:All my child's report card reflects is that my child is that my child is proficient. Nothing helpful. At least if they are going to use these inane meaningless report cards, the teachers should provide a personal evaluation of each child's strengths and weaknesses. What a waste of paper and energy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All my child's report card reflects is that my child is that my child is proficient. Nothing helpful. At least if they are going to use these inane meaningless report cards, the teachers should provide a personal evaluation of each child's strengths and weaknesses. What a waste of paper and energy.
Teachers don't have time for that. And proficient is helpful information, at least to me. It means there is nothing specific I need to do at this time to help my child work towards meeting standards, because so far he has met them all. Therefore, that tells me we're free to focus our time at home on any portion of academics we find important at the time or on something else not school related.
If the report card reflects one or more areas that are not proficient, that tells me I need to get in touch with the teacher to get tips for how I can work with DS at home to get him to the point of meeting standards in that category.
It would be nice to know a bunch of in depth personalized information about all aspects of DS's academic profile, but all I really need to know is whether he's demonstrating that he has learned what he should at this time or whether some additional reinforcement is needed from home.
Anonymous wrote:All my child's report card reflects is that my child is that my child is proficient. Nothing helpful. At least if they are going to use these inane meaningless report cards, the teachers should provide a personal evaluation of each child's strengths and weaknesses. What a waste of paper and energy.
Anonymous wrote:DD got a bunch of Is for things the teacher knows she knows. She's sometimes uncooperative about doing her work.
I've read they are supposed to grade on mastery and not effort but it looks like our school doesn't care about that.
Anonymous wrote:
Does not really explain what most of the sub categories mean