Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many private schools are still using Lucy Calkin’s workshop models. There are no guarantees for public or private.
Not the Catholic schools. This is why the idea of using tried and true teaching methods is best. I wouldn't have it any other way for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Back in the day, kids did not have to read until first grade, now it is kindergarten. Both my kids read before K and went all through public, and we had friends who went all through private, didn't read until later. Guess what? they all catch up and can read. Obviously, each kid is different and learn at a different pace.
Anonymous wrote:Americans are nuts about starting early for everything! It's never how you start. I think that age 5 is still young. I get academically you have to get up to par grade wise to keep up at any school but not reading well in K is truly NOT a big deal. My 2 kids in MD read great in K. One is fine but the other was t diagnosed with dyslexia until 5th grade! So just because he read well in K did not mean all will be well thereafter. My point is you gotta look at where a kid is at 6/7 to really figure out what's what and then there is still plenty of time to catch up. My dyslexia kid took years with hard work but is finally doing great. In Scandinavia they don't even worry about this stuff till after age 7.
Anonymous wrote:My child in private K went in knowing her ABCs and a handful of sight words and that’s it. She is now sounding out words well with a phonics-based approach and reading fairly well. My neighbor’s kid in public K who comes over a lot had about the same level of preparedness is not able to sound out words and kind of guesses. This child is not SN or anything, it’s quite possible they are naturally more intelligent than my child, but they are simply not being taught the right techniques.
I think many of the people who are happy with public are either putting in a lot of effort themselves at home or else sending to Kumon.
Anonymous wrote:Who needs to teach or instruct for reading? Just give the children some picture books each day, read to them in library class and they’ll figure it on. Whole language baby!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Listening to "Sold a Story" and seeing that MCPS has once again put out an RFP for reading programs for implementation next year are both certainly influencing my decision making regarding private school.
Everyone should listen to this podcast. I'm incredibly thankful that we lucked into a preschool that taught phonics, because the whole language/cueing/Lucy Calkins stuff sounds insane to me (and I had no idea it existed when my kids were young). And for the PP who says that it all evens out and every kid learns to read eventually, the thing is, it doesn't and they don't. Sure, anyone reading the DCUM private school forum can probably pay enough to get their child caught up, but there are plenty of people who don't have those resources. What's especially hard is that parents are being told that their kid is on track and learning fine, and it can be a year or more later when they find out that their kid doesn't in fact actually know how to read.
Anonymous wrote:Listening to "Sold a Story" and seeing that MCPS has once again put out an RFP for reading programs for implementation next year are both certainly influencing my decision making regarding private school.
Anonymous wrote:My child in private K went in knowing her ABCs and a handful of sight words and that’s it. She is now sounding out words well with a phonics-based approach and reading fairly well. My neighbor’s kid in public K who comes over a lot had about the same level of preparedness is not able to sound out words and kind of guesses. This child is not SN or anything, it’s quite possible they are naturally more intelligent than my child, but they are simply not being taught the right techniques.
I think many of the people who are happy with public are either putting in a lot of effort themselves at home or else sending to Kumon.