they are getting a ton of computer use at school, too. Today my DC used computers in PE and in music.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What grade? ES it doesn't matter. HS does have some classes that you have to pass the SOL.
If your kid is in ES, I would look at practice questions and help her get comfortable with the format. She has to pass some eventually, use this as practice for taking this type of test.
Nope. This should be happening at school. Not at home. Signed FCPS teacher
I am not a big fan of letting my child fail when I can help them pass. I would rather take the time to teach my child test taking skills so that they learn how to take a test properly because at some point in time, they need to be able to pass standardized tests on a computer. Allowing my kid to develop test anxiety is not acceptable.
For my entire life, I took all my tests on paper until I took the GMAT. Somehow I managed to ace it. Computers are not hard. Computer science is hard (I majored it it) but using them is not.
It is for young kids who don't use them much. Yes, some kids get a lot of screen time, others don't. We don't actually limit our kids' screen time. They have access to an ipad and kindle fire and a laptop, but they don't choose to play games on them. So their only computer use is at school.
Anonymous wrote:It is cheating because the tests are supposed to measure what the school has taught. Going in to the test cold gives an accurate picture of how the school fell short. Thats the point of the test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SOLs for ES are supposed to show whether FCPS taught the basic, minimum information.
All this review, sending links for parents to "practice" at home with their kids, and whatnot is the school trying to CHEAT.
I would just opt her out and skip the hassle.
LOL! What?! Reviewing for an assessment is not cheating. It's a fundamental life skill.
But the point of the SOL is to assess the school's effectiveness at teaching the minimum standards.
Cramming kids full of everything you didn't teach all yeAr or expecting parents to do it at home is absolutely cheating by the school.
Anonymous wrote:Our ES assigned all the students who had failed an SOL to the same class the following Sept.
Anonymous wrote:The SOLs for ES are supposed to show whether FCPS taught the basic, minimum information.
All this review, sending links for parents to "practice" at home with their kids, and whatnot is the school trying to CHEAT.
I would just opt her out and skip the hassle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What grade? ES it doesn't matter. HS does have some classes that you have to pass the SOL.
If your kid is in ES, I would look at practice questions and help her get comfortable with the format. She has to pass some eventually, use this as practice for taking this type of test.
Nope. This should be happening at school. Not at home. Signed FCPS teacher
I am not a big fan of letting my child fail when I can help them pass. I would rather take the time to teach my child test taking skills so that they learn how to take a test properly because at some point in time, they need to be able to pass standardized tests on a computer. Allowing my kid to develop test anxiety is not acceptable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SOLs for ES are supposed to show whether FCPS taught the basic, minimum information.
All this review, sending links for parents to "practice" at home with their kids, and whatnot is the school trying to CHEAT.
I would just opt her out and skip the hassle.
LOL! What?! Reviewing for an assessment is not cheating. It's a fundamental life skill.
But the point of the SOL is to assess the school's effectiveness at teaching the minimum standards.
Cramming kids full of everything you didn't teach all yeAr or expecting parents to do it at home is absolutely cheating by the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What grade? ES it doesn't matter. HS does have some classes that you have to pass the SOL.
If your kid is in ES, I would look at practice questions and help her get comfortable with the format. She has to pass some eventually, use this as practice for taking this type of test.
Nope. This should be happening at school. Not at home. Signed FCPS teacher
I am not a big fan of letting my child fail when I can help them pass. I would rather take the time to teach my child test taking skills so that they learn how to take a test properly because at some point in time, they need to be able to pass standardized tests on a computer. Allowing my kid to develop test anxiety is not acceptable.
For my entire life, I took all my tests on paper until I took the GMAT. Somehow I managed to ace it. Computers are not hard. Computer science is hard (I majored it it) but using them is not.
It is for young kids who don't use them much. Yes, some kids get a lot of screen time, others don't. We don't actually limit our kids' screen time. They have access to an ipad and kindle fire and a laptop, but they don't choose to play games on them. So their only computer use is at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SOLs for ES are supposed to show whether FCPS taught the basic, minimum information.
All this review, sending links for parents to "practice" at home with their kids, and whatnot is the school trying to CHEAT.
I would just opt her out and skip the hassle.
LOL! What?! Reviewing for an assessment is not cheating. It's a fundamental life skill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What grade? ES it doesn't matter. HS does have some classes that you have to pass the SOL.
If your kid is in ES, I would look at practice questions and help her get comfortable with the format. She has to pass some eventually, use this as practice for taking this type of test.
Nope. This should be happening at school. Not at home. Signed FCPS teacher
I am not a big fan of letting my child fail when I can help them pass. I would rather take the time to teach my child test taking skills so that they learn how to take a test properly because at some point in time, they need to be able to pass standardized tests on a computer. Allowing my kid to develop test anxiety is not acceptable.
For my entire life, I took all my tests on paper until I took the GMAT. Somehow I managed to ace it. Computers are not hard. Computer science is hard (I majored it it) but using them is not.
Anonymous wrote:The SOLs for ES are supposed to show whether FCPS taught the basic, minimum information.
All this review, sending links for parents to "practice" at home with their kids, and whatnot is the school trying to CHEAT.
I would just opt her out and skip the hassle.
Anonymous wrote:The SOLs for ES are supposed to show whether FCPS taught the basic, minimum information.
All this review, sending links for parents to "practice" at home with their kids, and whatnot is the school trying to CHEAT.
I would just opt her out and skip the hassle.