Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you decide that your child is reading on a 10th grade level? X and Y are 6th grade level. Z is 7th. It's honestly not that uncommon for bright 4th and 5th graders to read books in that range, especially for fun. I wouldn't assume that a child reading level XYZ in 4th/5th is even gifted. It's really much more common than you would imagine.
It's also not uncommon for them to slum it and read under their level for enjoyment.
OP here. I'm going off what his teacher reported. Z is DRA's 8th grade level. I have no idea how she knows that he'd reading at the 10th grade level. I'm assuming she has a way of assessing that.
As for being gifted, DS has been tested. He's is profoundly gifted with an SB score above 160. There are a lot of gifted kids in this area, but not a lot of PG kids.
Why are you hung up on how gifted DS is rather than responding to the question. Oh, you're one of those people who is convinced no child discussed on DCUM could possibly be gifted, and tearing down the poster.
It is nearly impossible to believe that someone like you sound to be, hears her kid tested at reading at a 10th grade level and yet she does not follow up with the teacher to see how that was determined.
—former teacher and do not believe your son was truly assessed at this level in elementary school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you decide that your child is reading on a 10th grade level? X and Y are 6th grade level. Z is 7th. It's honestly not that uncommon for bright 4th and 5th graders to read books in that range, especially for fun. I wouldn't assume that a child reading level XYZ in 4th/5th is even gifted. It's really much more common than you would imagine.
It's also not uncommon for them to slum it and read under their level for enjoyment.
OP here. I'm going off what his teacher reported. Z is DRA's 8th grade level. I have no idea how she knows that he'd reading at the 10th grade level. I'm assuming she has a way of assessing that.
As for being gifted, DS has been tested. He's is profoundly gifted with an SB score above 160. There are a lot of gifted kids in this area, but not a lot of PG kids.
Why are you hung up on how gifted DS is rather than responding to the question. Oh, you're one of those people who is convinced no child discussed on DCUM could possibly be gifted, and tearing down the poster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He’s not that gifted, plenty of kids, including mine, are similarly situated in reading, and they all like to veg out with low-brow entertainment.
I assign some reading for my kids and let them entertain themselves how they want.
Actually he is that gifted.
Are you always such a jerk?
No, but you rubbed everyone the wrong way. You should know that DCUM doesn't like the term "gifted" because it's applied so often it loses all meaning. Moreover, your example of giftedness was something that many kids do!
You can mention your child's IQ in your original post next time, IF APPLICABLE to the discussion, so that people don't assume you're one of those parents. Which to all intents and purposes for this thread, you are. My son read college-level texts as a 5th grader. So what? He also read plenty of Calvin and Hobbes or other comics at that age.
Stop being so uptight.
Anonymous wrote:So, my son reads in the XYZ levels of the DRA system.
His preferred downtime reading this summer is Big Nate, which is something like a 3rd grade level. He's rediscovered the series after not reading it for several years. He's also reading Ballad of the Songbird and Snakes, a few Marie Lu books, and some other books that are more at his reading level.
Should I worry about is love of Big Nate? He likes to adopt sayings and attitudes from the book, which I find disconcerting. Big Nate is not exactly a great role model. I'm not going to censor his reading, but I'm just trying to figure out why a kid who can read years ahead of his grade level is reading something that he first read in 2nd grade.
Is this somehow indicative of emotional immaturity? Asynchronous development?
Anonymous wrote:OP, no matter how profoundly gifted he is, he’s still a 10 yo kid, and sometimes they just want to read something light and funny. Let him be a kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He’s not that gifted, plenty of kids, including mine, are similarly situated in reading, and they all like to veg out with low-brow entertainment.
I assign some reading for my kids and let them entertain themselves how they want.
Actually he is that gifted.
Are you always such a jerk?