Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Based on this, it sounds like your child is an utterly typical kindergarten reader and not advanced, so it makes sense that she is be treated as a typical kindergarten reader in the classroom.
If she's not choosing to read independently, though, I think it's worth questioning whether she's an engaged and curious reader, which is more important than reading level at this phase. This is especially striking when followed by you not giving her a choice most of the time as to what book she will read. It sounds like she's perhaps being turned off by being forced to read books that are beyond her competency, and may be losing confidence in her reading ability. You might try backing off and letting her pick her books, even if they seem too easy for you, and see what she does. Kids this age typically have an incredible hunger to learn, and will find things that just challenging enough to engage them without discouraging them.
OP here. I don't think she's advanced or gifted.
I'll let her choose books. But so far she has been progressing to higher levels of BOB books until she could fluently read them all.
She does not show a lot of curiosity though. She will read if you ask her and she enjoys it, but she prefers to play which we also do a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Based on this, it sounds like your child is an utterly typical kindergarten reader and not advanced, so it makes sense that she is be treated as a typical kindergarten reader in the classroom.
If she's not choosing to read independently, though, I think it's worth questioning whether she's an engaged and curious reader, which is more important than reading level at this phase. This is especially striking when followed by you not giving her a choice most of the time as to what book she will read. It sounds like she's perhaps being turned off by being forced to read books that are beyond her competency, and may be losing confidence in her reading ability. You might try backing off and letting her pick her books, even if they seem too easy for you, and see what she does. Kids this age typically have an incredible hunger to learn, and will find things that just challenging enough to engage them without discouraging them.
Not OP or PP but mine doesn't read on her own either. Red flag for what?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. My presumptions about the teacher are correct. She said herself she doesn't listen to kids read because she doesn't have time. So, of course, she is at best only vaguely aware of their kevels.
I'm coming to strongly suspect you are the mother of my child's classmate. TC by any chance? I don't need an answer but if yes, give it a rest, you're making yourself look silly.
Not the OP but there are probably about 10,000 moms in exactly the same situation as the OP. Could be anyone. And she doesn't look silly she is frustrated and rightly so. The problem is when you write on here you get a majority of under-achievers who resent her position and aren't helpful or kind about it.
Is that you OP??
No I'm the poster whose DD skipped 1st grade and was called a liar for mentioning it.![]()
I am the PP above who was the very advanced early reader. I suspect this will fall on deaf ears, but think carefully about how invested you are in your child's reading ("underachievers?" You really said that and admit it?). Please, for the sake of your child and coming from somebody who was a lot like your child from your description, just think about it.
Also, I read this whole thread and I didn't see anybody call you a liar, but this hypersensitiveness about any perceived slight to your child's intellectual abilities is something that is very, very familiar to me.
you sound insane.
I disagree. The bolded is what is really insane. I have an "underachiever". Well actually she is achieving at her ability so no she isn't "under" achieving. I can emphatically say I do not envy OP. First of all her school sounds awful. Second of all she is completely wacked out about her kids reading ability. SO MANY PARENTS think early reading or advanced reading means WAY more than it does. There is more to life. Thankfully I know that seeing as I have an "under" achiever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This just isn't that big of a deal. What books is your child reading at home right now? Don't increase it - just the truth - what books is she reading on her own?
She does not read on her own. We read together at night. I read to her and then I give her a book to read. I don't give her a choice. Well, sometimes I give her a choice, but they are all the same level. At first it was BOBBooks, now it's books from the Scholastic "I can read" series, level 1 and 2.
She can read them and comprehend most of the text.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This just isn't that big of a deal. What books is your child reading at home right now? Don't increase it - just the truth - what books is she reading on her own?
She does not read on her own. We read together at night. I read to her and then I give her a book to read. I don't give her a choice. Well, sometimes I give her a choice, but they are all the same level. At first it was BOBBooks, now it's books from the Scholastic "I can read" series, level 1 and 2.
She can read them and comprehend most of the text.
Well, there's a red flag.
red flag for what?
red flag for what?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This just isn't that big of a deal. What books is your child reading at home right now? Don't increase it - just the truth - what books is she reading on her own?
She does not read on her own. We read together at night. I read to her and then I give her a book to read. I don't give her a choice. Well, sometimes I give her a choice, but they are all the same level. At first it was BOBBooks, now it's books from the Scholastic "I can read" series, level 1 and 2.
She can read them and comprehend most of the text.
Well, there's a red flag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This just isn't that big of a deal. What books is your child reading at home right now? Don't increase it - just the truth - what books is she reading on her own?
She does not read on her own. We read together at night. I read to her and then I give her a book to read. I don't give her a choice. Well, sometimes I give her a choice, but they are all the same level. At first it was BOBBooks, now it's books from the Scholastic "I can read" series, level 1 and 2.
She can read them and comprehend most of the text.
Anonymous wrote:This just isn't that big of a deal. What books is your child reading at home right now? Don't increase it - just the truth - what books is she reading on her own?
Anonymous wrote:I am increasingly doubtful that OP is a real (sincere? valid? non-troll?) poster.
Anonymous wrote:Does DD like the school? Does she enjoy Kindergarten?