Anonymous wrote:My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
This is over the top. Weeks of after school remediation? Wow. This points to how important these scores are for the school. Chances are they were looking to increase their "pass advanced" rate which may benefit an administrator who is looking to move up. Just saying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child will be pulled out to retake a test he has already taken. Why put your child in the position of having all his friends know he failed the first time and so has to retake.
My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
And if she still doesn't pass the SOL and they want her to re-test, they have my blessing. We've always told our kids that the SOLs are a reflection on the school's teaching methods rather than the students' ability. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Why would you want your kid to miss core instruction to re-take a test that has no benefit to her whatsoever???
"Core instruction"? After the SOLs? Not at our school. All teaching ceases after the SOLs, even in the lower grades where they don't even take SOLs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child will be pulled out to retake a test he has already taken. Why put your child in the position of having all his friends know he failed the first time and so has to retake.
My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
And if she still doesn't pass the SOL and they want her to re-test, they have my blessing. We've always told our kids that the SOLs are a reflection on the school's teaching methods rather than the students' ability. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Why would you want your kid to miss core instruction to re-take a test that has no benefit to her whatsoever???
Anonymous wrote:My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
And if she still doesn't pass the SOL and they want her to re-test, they have my blessing. We've always told our kids that the SOLs are a reflection on the school's teaching methods rather than the students' ability. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Glad to hear that your DD enjoyed her SOL remediation classes based on the worry that she might not pass it. Since you feel they are a reflection on the school's teaching methods, what were the methods that caused your DD to have to be in after school remediation?
My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child will be pulled out to retake a test he has already taken. Why put your child in the position of having all his friends know he failed the first time and so has to retake.
My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
And if she still doesn't pass the SOL and they want her to re-test, they have my blessing. We've always told our kids that the SOLs are a reflection on the school's teaching methods rather than the students' ability. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child will be pulled out to retake a test he has already taken. Why put your child in the position of having all his friends know he failed the first time and so has to retake.
My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
And if she still doesn't pass the SOL and they want her to re-test, they have my blessing. We've always told our kids that the SOLs are a reflection on the school's teaching methods rather than the students' ability. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Why would you want your kid to miss core instruction to re-take a test that has no benefit to her whatsoever???
My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
And if she still doesn't pass the SOL and they want her to re-test, they have my blessing. We've always told our kids that the SOLs are a reflection on the school's teaching methods rather than the students' ability. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't let my child retake any standardized test. Hell no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child will be pulled out to retake a test he has already taken. Why put your child in the position of having all his friends know he failed the first time and so has to retake.
My DD was in an after school "remediation" class for weeks prior to the SOLs. Apparently, they did some kind of assessment and were concerned she might not pass. Was I supposed to turn it down because her friends might find out and she'd feel humiliated by it? Heck no. All her friends were in the same class. She had a great time.
And if she still doesn't pass the SOL and they want her to re-test, they have my blessing. We've always told our kids that the SOLs are a reflection on the school's teaching methods rather than the students' ability. It's all smoke and mirrors.
Anonymous wrote:Your child will be pulled out to retake a test he has already taken. Why put your child in the position of having all his friends know he failed the first time and so has to retake.
Anonymous wrote:Give your kid another chance. No need to have them carry the failure for a year to make some silly point.
Anonymous wrote:Wasn't there significant testing irregularities associated with the tests this year? If your child was a part of any of them I would ask to have the results stricken.
Anonymous wrote:Give your kid another chance. No need to have them carry the failure for a year to make some silly point.