Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My charter K has math every day but they have been working on shapes and counting to ten for three weeks. It's frustrating for my kid.
It’s not just about your kid.
I'm pretty sure I didn't say it was. I was answering a question and commenting on our experience. And 90 minutes of screen time 4 times a week plus daily assignments and an asynchronous lesson for three weeks has been a lot of repetition without variety. I imagine this would not be the same in person.
I understand curriculum and I understand the limits of distance learning. But but I do think I'm allowed to have opinions about it.
“It’s frustrating for my kid.” There are other kids in your snowflakes class kids who may find this level of math just right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My charter K has math every day but they have been working on shapes and counting to ten for three weeks. It's frustrating for my kid.
It’s not just about your kid.
I'm pretty sure I didn't say it was. I was answering a question and commenting on our experience. And 90 minutes of screen time 4 times a week plus daily assignments and an asynchronous lesson for three weeks has been a lot of repetition without variety. I imagine this would not be the same in person.
I understand curriculum and I understand the limits of distance learning. But but I do think I'm allowed to have opinions about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My charter K has math every day but they have been working on shapes and counting to ten for three weeks. It's frustrating for my kid.
It’s not just about your kid.
Anonymous wrote:My charter K has math every day but they have been working on shapes and counting to ten for three weeks. It's frustrating for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Our EOTP DCPS school has math daily. Counting to 100, counting in “tens”, practice writing numbers, basic addition, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are also at a Capitol Hill DCPS and I could have written almost this exact post. Math the first two weeks had them differentiating between socks (like “one has stripes and one doesn’t”); almost exactly what my PK3er is doing at the same school. We tried Zearn and my kid was bored in minutes. 5 exercises in a row of counting to 5? No initial assessment at all? I emailed the teacher and she bumped us to the last K unit, which is 1-20 (as opposed to 1-5). It’s all still remedial, but not bad for fluency so I’m having my kid race through it as quickly as possible like it’s a game. I am hopeful things might improve once we reach 1st grade. We’ve done an hour over 3 days and she’s about half way through this unit.
This is the curriculum.
The teacher has to teach it. Wether in person or in the classroom.
It won’t change.
Anonymous wrote:I always feel bad for kindergarten parents. They’re unfamiliar with math education. Math will run 1-2 years behind where you feel it should...until your kid gets to pre-algebra. And along the way, you won’t even recognize the math they DO do!
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why there can’t be a Lexia equivalent for math. Way more engaging in terms of interface, builds in choice, levels with different themes, and an assessment to start! So much better!
Anonymous wrote:We are also at a Capitol Hill DCPS and I could have written almost this exact post. Math the first two weeks had them differentiating between socks (like “one has stripes and one doesn’t”); almost exactly what my PK3er is doing at the same school. We tried Zearn and my kid was bored in minutes. 5 exercises in a row of counting to 5? No initial assessment at all? I emailed the teacher and she bumped us to the last K unit, which is 1-20 (as opposed to 1-5). It’s all still remedial, but not bad for fluency so I’m having my kid race through it as quickly as possible like it’s a game. I am hopeful things might improve once we reach 1st grade. We’ve done an hour over 3 days and she’s about half way through this unit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My charter K has math every day but they have been working on shapes and counting to ten for three weeks. It's frustrating for my kid.
What kind of algebra do you think your 5 year old would be doing in kindergarten math?
I was hoping for some diff eq, but it's early so I won't send my sternly worded email just yet.