Anonymous wrote:My kids both complain that it's hard and admit that it's better.
One said it made the SOL seem easy this year.
Anonymous wrote:I think they should be reading chapter books as a class in 3rd grade+. I have good memories of my whole class reading Charlotte’s Web and The Indian In The Cupboard when I was a kid.
3rd grader here and Benchmark seems difficult for this age range. My DS is having trouble with the “theme”-type questions that come up on the assessments. There was an assessment with passages from Little Women and a chart on it asking students to identify which “theme” occurred in either story. That’s a lot for a 3rd grader IMO. One thing that I did appreciate is that his class is doing spelling quizzes in class this year, and I do think my kid’s spelling has improved as a result.
I’ll have a K next school year and I’m hoping it’s good for the younger age range with the greater focus on phonics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they use Benchmark in middle school? Please tell me no!
The Virginia State literacy act is for K-8 so something is coming
I'm pretty sure they already use HMH and No Red Ink in middle school. My MS kid has unit tests that are from the county (according to the ELA teacher). They also do a lot of No Red Ink practice activities and essays.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they use Benchmark in middle school? Please tell me no!
The Virginia State literacy act is for K-8 so something is coming
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where parents are getting that their third graders should be reading novels in elementary schools - that's your job as a parent. My kids are literally sitting on the floor reading books this morning because they both woke up early and finished breakfast quickly. Do better, parents!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they should be reading chapter books as a class in 3rd grade+. I have good memories of my whole class reading Charlotte’s Web and The Indian In The Cupboard when I was a kid.
3rd grader here and Benchmark seems difficult for this age range. My DS is having trouble with the “theme”-type questions that come up on the assessments. There was an assessment with passages from Little Women and a chart on it asking students to identify which “theme” occurred in either story. That’s a lot for a 3rd grader IMO. One thing that I did appreciate is that his class is doing spelling quizzes in class this year, and I do think my kid’s spelling has improved as a result.
I’ll have a K next school year and I’m hoping it’s good for the younger age range with the greater focus on phonics.
Gee. I grew up when book reports were main characters--hero, villain, etc. Also the crisis and unfoldment. I might have trouble myself with the "theme."
Anonymous wrote:I think they should be reading chapter books as a class in 3rd grade+. I have good memories of my whole class reading Charlotte’s Web and The Indian In The Cupboard when I was a kid.
3rd grader here and Benchmark seems difficult for this age range. My DS is having trouble with the “theme”-type questions that come up on the assessments. There was an assessment with passages from Little Women and a chart on it asking students to identify which “theme” occurred in either story. That’s a lot for a 3rd grader IMO. One thing that I did appreciate is that his class is doing spelling quizzes in class this year, and I do think my kid’s spelling has improved as a result.
I’ll have a K next school year and I’m hoping it’s good for the younger age range with the greater focus on phonics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where parents are getting that their third graders should be reading novels in elementary schools - that's your job as a parent. My kids are literally sitting on the floor reading books this morning because they both woke up early and finished breakfast quickly. Do better, parents!
Reading chapter books in school was part of the balanced literacy, so that’s not returning anytime soon. It should be the parents responsibility to ensure that their students are reading novels.
There’s no time in school to get whole novels read and many students don’t do it on their own, so it should be the parents responsibility.
So classist. Some kids have parents who either can't (illiterate or multiple jobs) or won't read at home.
Anonymous wrote:Do they use Benchmark in middle school? Please tell me no!
Anonymous wrote:My 5th grade AAP kid went from enjoying reading to telling me language arts is his least favorite part of the day![]()
I don’t know if it’s the age, the teacher, the curriculum, but this year has been really rough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure where parents are getting that their third graders should be reading novels in elementary schools - that's your job as a parent. My kids are literally sitting on the floor reading books this morning because they both woke up early and finished breakfast quickly. Do better, parents!
Reading chapter books in school was part of the balanced literacy, so that’s not returning anytime soon. It should be the parents responsibility to ensure that their students are reading novels.
There’s no time in school to get whole novels read and many students don’t do it on their own, so it should be the parents responsibility.