Anonymous wrote:I want to know more about the testing performed to determine math level. It is possible that the child's mom misunderstood what the Grade Level Equivalent rating meant? It generally means that the child performed as well as the average 5th grader on material presented at the child's grade level (i.e. K or pre-K), and not that the child performed as well as 5th graders on a test covering 5th grade level materials.
For the child to be at a 5th grade level, the child would need to know decimals and decimal operations, fractions and fraction operations, long division, measurements and conversions, application of math to word problems, some amount of variables, and so on. There's no way a non reading child just plucked all of that out of thin air.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know more about the testing performed to determine math level. It is possible that the child's mom misunderstood what the Grade Level Equivalent rating meant? It generally means that the child performed as well as the average 5th grader on material presented at the child's grade level (i.e. K or pre-K), and not that the child performed as well as 5th graders on a test covering 5th grade level materials.
For the child to be at a 5th grade level, the child would need to know decimals and decimal operations, fractions and fraction operations, long division, measurements and conversions, application of math to word problems, some amount of variables, and so on. There's no way a non reading child just plucked all of that out of thin air.
They could from apps and tv/videos but they aren't doing what OP thinks they are. They may know facts from apps/videos but that is memorization not use.
Anonymous wrote:I want to know more about the testing performed to determine math level. It is possible that the child's mom misunderstood what the Grade Level Equivalent rating meant? It generally means that the child performed as well as the average 5th grader on material presented at the child's grade level (i.e. K or pre-K), and not that the child performed as well as 5th graders on a test covering 5th grade level materials.
For the child to be at a 5th grade level, the child would need to know decimals and decimal operations, fractions and fraction operations, long division, measurements and conversions, application of math to word problems, some amount of variables, and so on. There's no way a non reading child just plucked all of that out of thin air.
Anonymous wrote:First off, who did the assessment? His rural preschool? They are very unlikely able to make any sort of giftedness/advanced assessment. I’d take that with a grain of salt. Kids from rural areas often look very gifted in comparison to their peers…once they are surrounded with peers from educated areas, they look closer to average.
If he went to a psychologist for testing, I don’t get mom’s hand waving about not having time to deal with him and being upset about the results…clearly she had time to find a testing place and do the tests.
Also, she has clearly worked with this kid or had him tutored. A non-reading three year old can’t be born competent in fifth grade math because (even if a genius), he wouldn’t know the jargon or how to express the concepts. So, she should just keep doing what she’s been doing.
Finally, the concept that genius kids are becoming troublemakers because they are bored is utter baloney. When your kids reach MS and HS, you will realize that the troublemakers have below average intelligence across the board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First, I think more info is needed. Is he in preschool? Is he happy or frustrated?
Second, at 3 skills are all over the place. I'm not saying this kid couldn't be a profoundly gifted kid, but he could also not be by the time he gets to school age.
Why did your cousin's mom break down, exactly?
He is almost 4 and just started 1/2 day preschool. His mom already has a lot going on in her life ,and this is one more challenge she didn't need. She is upset because the school basically told her that there is nothing they can do for him. Even if his math skills came to an abrupt stop today, he is facing years of sitting through math instruction for concepts he has already mastered. I have seen this kid rattle off multiplication facts, and he seems to have deeper understanding beyond rote skills. If he is already at a 5th grade level, he will be wasting time and not learning anything new in elementary school regardless of whether he gets a label of "profoundly gifted" or not. He's fine now, but if (when) he gets bored, he may also risk becoming a behavioral problem. I think she needs practical advice on two fronts 1) how to keep him from getting bored in school, and 2) how to feed his current passion for math and educate him on his level.