Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, OP. You are paying reeealllly close attention to this. Really, really close attention. Isn't there something else you can do with your time? Your kid is fine.
Is there not something better you could do with your time? Without all of the relevant background information, I don't see how you can make such an abrasive comment. Life is not fair. My kid knows that. She's also learning there will always be people like you, people who just haven't figured out how to disagree respectfully. I haven't asked for special treatment. My kid is one of the favored kids, if you must know. It's so blatantly biased that it needs to be addressed.
For the person who mentioned experiencing the same thing in another country, thank you. The teacher is not Amercan-trained, and I've tried to understand how/why she does things the way she does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids? I don't understand what is being done. Are they hanging up their work? Reviewing it in front of everyone and saying "Eliza did this wrong"?
They're 2nd graders. Essentially, yes, this is what is happening. As a class, the kids get on the website and review each other's answers,what they did well, and what they didn't do well.
Are you sure it is the second graders reviewing the online comments? Or is it the moms? It sounds like kids parroting moms, not kids logging themselves on, searching for their friends scores just to rib them. I know my second graders never got online without an adult or older sibling helping, including my current second grader.
Anonymous wrote:OP maybe put this energy in helping snowflake make fewer mistakes.
Anonymous wrote:OP, 2nd grade teachers don't edit for things like run on sentences. Second grade writing is about getting the kids used to producing writing, even if there are errors. They start correcting for those things in third grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids? I don't understand what is being done. Are they hanging up their work? Reviewing it in front of everyone and saying "Eliza did this wrong"?
They're 2nd graders. Essentially, yes, this is what is happening. As a class, the kids get on the website and review each other's answers,what they did well, and what they didn't do well.
Think about it - if your child's work was the shining example, would you even have cared about this situation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids? I don't understand what is being done. Are they hanging up their work? Reviewing it in front of everyone and saying "Eliza did this wrong"?
They're 2nd graders. Essentially, yes, this is what is happening. As a class, the kids get on the website and review each other's answers,what they did well, and what they didn't do well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not about fair. It's about sharing student info that is no one else's business. Are you okay with your child's entire class along with their parents knowing your kids every grade?
Yup. I was humiliated every week of tenth grade after our spelling tests when the scores were announced. Everyone except I got an A or a high B. I usually got a D. I really studied. Every week. I still can't spell but even then I knew that well presented work mattered. I was an excellent student with an issue that wasn't anyone's business and it was mortifying to hear about my failure out loud. Every week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids? I don't understand what is being done. Are they hanging up their work? Reviewing it in front of everyone and saying "Eliza did this wrong"?
They're 2nd graders. Essentially, yes, this is what is happening. As a class, the kids get on the website and review each other's answers,what they did well, and what they didn't do well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids? I don't understand what is being done. Are they hanging up their work? Reviewing it in front of everyone and saying "Eliza did this wrong"?
They're 2nd graders. Essentially, yes, this is what is happening. As a class, the kids get on the website and review each other's answers,what they did well, and what they didn't do well.
Anonymous wrote:It's not about fair. It's about sharing student info that is no one else's business. Are you okay with your child's entire class along with their parents knowing your kids every grade?
Anonymous wrote:Oh, OP. You are paying reeealllly close attention to this. Really, really close attention. Isn't there something else you can do with your time? Your kid is fine.
Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids? I don't understand what is being done. Are they hanging up their work? Reviewing it in front of everyone and saying "Eliza did this wrong"?