Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, but I wish they'd do something to challenge my kindergartener as she's an early reader and not a all challenged at school.
What is this thing about being challenged? Kindergarten is a lot more than reading. Plus at this age they read books according to their ability so it doesn’t matter what reading level any of them are.
People yammering about how their kindergarteners are not challenged because they read Harry Potter are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:No, but I wish they'd do something to challenge my kindergartener as she's an early reader and not a all challenged at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spelling us one thing but the capitalization part is off. Kids are just learning to write letters at all. Asking A instead of a is not spelling.
So when should kids learn to use the correct letter case?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids had "words of the week" but there was no test on them. They were just sort of the focus. And I distinctly remember the first list was just A and I.
This makes far more sense for Kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:I am jealous kids get this in school now. Ours came through during the “joy writing” era and most kids could not spell coming out of ES. Send flowers and say big thank you to any teacher who does spelling in ES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope and I’d be nervous the teacher has missed the entire shift to the science of reading and for that matter the common core standards…. Both of which clearly articulate there’s no need for spelling tests.
Your kid needs explicit, systematic, cumulative and diagnostic foundational skills instruction. If that sounds tricky check out the sold a story podcast.
That’s actually fallen out of favor. Now, nationally, phonics and spelling tests are back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spelling us one thing but the capitalization part is off. Kids are just learning to write letters at all. Asking A instead of a is not spelling.
So when should kids learn to use the correct letter case?
Anonymous wrote:My kids had "words of the week" but there was no test on them. They were just sort of the focus. And I distinctly remember the first list was just A and I.