Anonymous wrote:How did you get your child's ready scores? They did not come with the report card.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NNAT measures spatial reasoning. Iready measures math achievement. The tests don’t even remotely measure the same thing.
You're right. Both tests are essentially meaningless.
Anonymous wrote:Are the expected ranges for fall adjusted for AAP? That is, the score range that came with my sixth grade AAP student - is that for AAP sixth graders or all 6th graders?
Anonymous wrote:NNAT measures spatial reasoning. Iready measures math achievement. The tests don’t even remotely measure the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:I believe that chart is outdated; I think this is the latest one: http://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/7539/urlt/iready-norms-tables-K-8-2020.pdf
I'll be referring my kiddo; they were in the 95th percentile in both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I believe that chart is outdated; I think this is the latest one: http://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/7539/urlt/iready-norms-tables-K-8-2020.pdf
I'll be referring my kiddo; they were in the 95th percentile in both.
Iready is not a predictor of giftedness, I hope you have other reasons for thinking your child needs AAP.
Anonymous wrote:I believe that chart is outdated; I think this is the latest one: http://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/7539/urlt/iready-norms-tables-K-8-2020.pdf
I'll be referring my kiddo; they were in the 95th percentile in both.
Anonymous wrote:I believe that chart is outdated; I think this is the latest one: http://www.fldoe.org/core/fileparse.php/7539/urlt/iready-norms-tables-K-8-2020.pdf
I'll be referring my kiddo; they were in the 95th percentile in both.