Anonymous wrote:I am a second grade teacher. For word study a spelling inventory is given early in the year and the kids are grouped based on results. There are kids who learn the spelling patterns which I then see in their writing. They move to higher groups. There are also kids who memorize the spelling of words for the weekly test but do not transfer that to theor writing. They do not move up to a higher group. could that be your child? How students spell in their daily writing determines whether they move up, not performance on spelling tests.
Anonymous wrote:There must be some reason the teacher is keeping her in the middle group and not giving her the more challenging words and assignments. Instead of asking the teacher to give her the harder words, ask the teacher what she still needs to work on in order to move up to the next group.
The teacher isn't intentionally keeping her in the middle group just because she's "easy" - I'm sure most of the kids in the top group are easy kids too. Find out what she really needs to work on.
For my DS, it's writing. He's also in second grade and in the top reading group right now, but the teacher has told us that, while he's one of the very best readers in the class, he's on the verge of being moved to the middle reading group because of his writing skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your description this sounds like it is more about emotion than facts. You feel that she was dumped, that she is ignored, that the teacher is just relieved she's an easy kid, that she is not recognized as special, and this is making you sad. But the only fact I heard is that you would like her to be in a higher reading group. So, without the sadness and frustration etc., ask the teacher how she was assessed to be in this reading group because you think she should be in it.
I agree.
Also, I have one highly gifted and one advanced but not gifted.
My highly gifted kid spent much of early elementary on his own, until we moved here and was placed in AAP. He is a go with the flow kind of kid, so that combined with already mastering the curriculum made it easy for the teachers to leave him to hisown devices for most of the day.
My very smart kid is more of a firery personality. He gets lots of attention, lots of enrichment, lots of different teaching techniques. I think it is because he is more boisterous and the teachers are trying to keep him occupied and find what catches his interest to make it easier to teach the rest of the class.
Your daughter probably has a good sized group of academic peers in her level placement, and is probably and easy student to teach.
OP here. I actually don't believe her reading and word study groups are her academic peers. There are only 3 other kids in her group and I know for a fact that two of them have private tutors and get pulled out for reading simply to scrape by. The same homework my DD sails through alone, these girls complete with a 1:1 private tutor. One girl was almost held back last year until her parents threw a fit and hired the summer tutor. These are NOT my daughters academic peers.
I did speak to the teacher (and last year's teacher too.) She claims there is some assessment (but not related to previous word study grades) that determines the level. I have yet to be told how the assessment works. Both teachers seem unwilling to deviate from what this all-knowing assessment tells them. (Yet this assessment is brief enough that they solo administer it individually to 25 kids!)
Anonymous wrote:I didn't read this whole thread but my DS always gets 100% on his spelling and vocabulary tests. Always. So, he asked the teacher to move him and then I discussed it with her. Turns out, he isn't a terrific speller when he is doing regular writing. He's an advanced writer too, but he lets the spelling lag. So, she wants him to start at the beginning and learn the spelling words list by list so that when he uses the words, he does so correctly. He is apparently just a good kid at memorizing lists. Anyway, she had a reason so we are going with it. Maybe your teacher does too.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't read this whole thread but my DS always gets 100% on his spelling and vocabulary tests. Always. So, he asked the teacher to move him and then I discussed it with her. Turns out, he isn't a terrific speller when he is doing regular writing. He's an advanced writer too, but he lets the spelling lag. So, she wants him to start at the beginning and learn the spelling words list by list so that when he uses the words, he does so correctly. He is apparently just a good kid at memorizing lists. Anyway, she had a reason so we are going with it. Maybe your teacher does too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here. I actually don't believe her reading and word study groups are her academic peers. There are only 3 other kids in her group and I know for a fact that two of them have private tutors and get pulled out for reading simply to scrape by. The same homework my DD sails through alone, these girls complete with a 1:1 private tutor. One girl was almost held back last year until her parents threw a fit and hired the summer tutor. These are NOT my daughters academic peers.
I did speak to the teacher (and last year's teacher too.) She claims there is some assessment (but not related to previous word study grades) that determines the level. I have yet to be told how the assessment works. Both teachers seem unwilling to deviate from what this all-knowing assessment tells them. (Yet this assessment is brief enough that they solo administer it individually to 25 kids!)
OP, your attitude may or may not be justified. But it is certainly not helpful. If you want to help your daughter, you have to work with the teachers. It sounds to me like you're marching in with the attitude that the teachers who are fools who don't know what they're doing, and you know better. This attitude will not work in your favor.
Also, you know far too much about the personal business of other students in the class.
OP here. I agree with the bolded. The mothers have big mouths and volunteer this to me. It's not like I ask.
As for working with the teachers, we've tried asking nicely. They just blow us off. Why am I the only one concerned that her supposed reading and spelling level have gone from advanced to supposedly grade level at best? If this is true (and I don't think it is) my daughter is inexplicably dropping of her own curve, and he teachers haven't noticed or don't care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here. I actually don't believe her reading and word study groups are her academic peers. There are only 3 other kids in her group and I know for a fact that two of them have private tutors and get pulled out for reading simply to scrape by. The same homework my DD sails through alone, these girls complete with a 1:1 private tutor. One girl was almost held back last year until her parents threw a fit and hired the summer tutor. These are NOT my daughters academic peers.
I did speak to the teacher (and last year's teacher too.) She claims there is some assessment (but not related to previous word study grades) that determines the level. I have yet to be told how the assessment works. Both teachers seem unwilling to deviate from what this all-knowing assessment tells them. (Yet this assessment is brief enough that they solo administer it individually to 25 kids!)
OP, your attitude may or may not be justified. But it is certainly not helpful. If you want to help your daughter, you have to work with the teachers. It sounds to me like you're marching in with the attitude that the teachers who are fools who don't know what they're doing, and you know better. This attitude will not work in your favor.
Also, you know far too much about the personal business of other students in the class.
Anonymous wrote:
OP here. I actually don't believe her reading and word study groups are her academic peers. There are only 3 other kids in her group and I know for a fact that two of them have private tutors and get pulled out for reading simply to scrape by. The same homework my DD sails through alone, these girls complete with a 1:1 private tutor. One girl was almost held back last year until her parents threw a fit and hired the summer tutor. These are NOT my daughters academic peers.
I did speak to the teacher (and last year's teacher too.) She claims there is some assessment (but not related to previous word study grades) that determines the level. I have yet to be told how the assessment works. Both teachers seem unwilling to deviate from what this all-knowing assessment tells them. (Yet this assessment is brief enough that they solo administer it individually to 25 kids!)