Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations for bragging about this to anonymous people on the internet.
I cannot imagine a parent bragging that their kid is average in English relative to a group of children that includes non native speakers. Even a 5 in math doesn't say much.
I mean standardized testing blows, but the PARCC is not on a curve. It tests whether you know common core standards. If lots and lots of kids don’t know the standards, your score doesn’t change because of that.
(I’m not defending the parcc or the common core, just pointing out the score isn’t relative.)
They include relative percentages, you performed better than X% of the students in your school and Y% of the students in DCPS, etc.
Op didn’t say anything about %. Just score. A 5 is great. Just let her be happy about. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations!
Your enthusiasm for PARCC testing has made James Fallon, the Pearson Ed CEO, his shareholders, and the many highly-paid OSSE consultants who massage the data that tiny bit wealthier! Why should Fallon settle for a net worth of hundreds of millions when the sky's the limit?
10 hours of testing for a 9 or 10 year old via a poorly designed and worded test, hurrah!!
Your kid bombed it, eh?
Sorry to disappoint you, no. We've opted out every year that DC has gone with the PARCC. We were OK with the DC-CAS for our older child.
Younger kid scored in 600s on SAT in 7th grade, qualifying for a Johns Hopkins CTY GT summer camp in the process.
OP here. Who’s bragging now?
Anonymous wrote:They could also be more sensitive to kids who don't test at all. Some of us opt out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They could also be more sensitive to kids who don't test at all. Some of us opt out.
No, they shouldn’t. You want to be an anti-social freak, there are natural consequences for it. No one needs to tread lightly because of your strange choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations!
Your enthusiasm for PARCC testing has made James Fallon, the Pearson Ed CEO, his shareholders, and the many highly-paid OSSE consultants who massage the data that tiny bit wealthier! Why should Fallon settle for a net worth of hundreds of millions when the sky's the limit?
10 hours of testing for a 9 or 10 year old via a poorly designed and worded test, hurrah!!
Your kid bombed it, eh?
Anonymous wrote:They could also be more sensitive to kids who don't test at all. Some of us opt out.
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations!
Your enthusiasm for PARCC testing has made James Fallon, the Pearson Ed CEO, his shareholders, and the many highly-paid OSSE consultants who massage the data that tiny bit wealthier! Why should Fallon settle for a net worth of hundreds of millions when the sky's the limit?
10 hours of testing for a 9 or 10 year old via a poorly designed and worded test, hurrah!!
Anonymous wrote:I'm wondering, too, if parents talk to their kids about their scores, or if teachers talk about specific scores in school. I'll ask our teachers, but it seems like there's not much point to talk about scores when they came from the preceding year.
My parents never told me my standardized test scores, other to say that I did fine. I didn't find out until cleaning out their files that I was consistently 99 percentile. I'm thankful that they didn't tell me, because I probably would have acted like an even bigger know-it-all than I was already. I now know that they're not very meaningful indicators, but I don't think I would have understood that as a kid.
). Unfortunately, other kids know their scored and as they get older, they talk about them and compare with others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations for bragging about this to anonymous people on the internet.
I cannot imagine a parent bragging that their kid is average in English relative to a group of children that includes non native speakers. Even a 5 in math doesn't say much.
I mean standardized testing blows, but the PARCC is not on a curve. It tests whether you know common core standards. If lots and lots of kids don’t know the standards, your score doesn’t change because of that.
(I’m not defending the parcc or the common core, just pointing out the score isn’t relative.)
They include relative percentages, you performed better than X% of the students in your school and Y% of the students in DCPS, etc.
Op didn’t say anything about %. Just score. A 5 is great. Just let her be happy about. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:I showed them to my DS 4th grader. Do kids bring up how they did in school or do they not care?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations for bragging about this to anonymous people on the internet.
I cannot imagine a parent bragging that their kid is average in English relative to a group of children that includes non native speakers. Even a 5 in math doesn't say much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations for bragging about this to anonymous people on the internet.
I cannot imagine a parent bragging that their kid is average in English relative to a group of children that includes non native speakers. Even a 5 in math doesn't say much.
I mean standardized testing blows, but the PARCC is not on a curve. It tests whether you know common core standards. If lots and lots of kids don’t know the standards, your score doesn’t change because of that.
(I’m not defending the parcc or the common core, just pointing out the score isn’t relative.)
They include relative percentages, you performed better than X% of the students in your school and Y% of the students in DCPS, etc.
Op didn’t say anything about %. Just score. A 5 is great. Just let her be happy about. Sheesh.