Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
My kid is local. The pitch that the principal made was that the presence of level IV kids allows the school to offer the level IV curriculum which is better for all children. The more kids who stay, the more they can spread clusters across different classes and any class with a cluster gets the level IV curriculum
So glad to hear this approach is working well for your child, but clustering is much more common in Title I settings where there aren't enough LIV students to make up a full class. Because so many students are behind, the LIV curriculum can't reasonably be implemented for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
My kid is local. The pitch that the principal made was that the presence of level IV kids allows the school to offer the level IV curriculum which is better for all children. The more kids who stay, the more they can spread clusters across different classes and any class with a cluster gets the level IV curriculum
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
Well, ALL kids except for the LLIV kids. But they don't matter because they're already smart or something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
As a parent of a rising 3rd grader at a similar school setting, this is great to hear. But I’m curious how you know that the ESOL students are doing really well. Do you work in the school?
This is what I gather from check-ins with the teacher and my friend who is a specialist at the school. My other child is in a class with a bunch of troublemakers and his teacher is on the verge of a nervous breakdown - but they're in 1st and from what I've read on DCUM and Reddit, first grade is a mess across the board!
Did I give you the "gotcha moment" you were looking for?
Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
As a parent of a rising 3rd grader at a similar school setting, this is great to hear. But I’m curious how you know that the ESOL students are doing really well. Do you work in the school?
This is what I gather from check-ins with the teacher and my friend who is a specialist at the school. My other child is in a class with a bunch of troublemakers and his teacher is on the verge of a nervous breakdown - but they're in 1st and from what I've read on DCUM and Reddit, first grade is a mess across the board!
Did I give you the "gotcha moment" you were looking for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
As a parent of a rising 3rd grader at a similar school setting, this is great to hear. But I’m curious how you know that the ESOL students are doing really well. Do you work in the school?
Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
Anonymous wrote:We're in a diverse (not title I) school and I am the child of a non LLIV in a class with LLIV kids. I will say that my child is doing MUCH better in this class than she was in a class with less advanced children. This is a boon for non-AAP kids - everyone is living up to their true potential. My child is in a class with ESOL kids, too, they're doing really well. It's great for ALL kids which is what we should all be wanting out of our school system.
#Sorrynotsorry if this is not what you want to hear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a teacher willing to chime in regarding the cluster model in a diverse school setting? It seems like a massive undertaking to properly instruct the level IV curriculum while supporting the learning needs of ELLs, SWD, struggling learners, and those on grade level. How does this possibly work?
Not a teacher but our school is “diverse” in the way you describe. Cluster model is not doing much as kids are kept in their “cluster” and teacher has to manage all those levels.
Anonymous wrote:Is there a teacher willing to chime in regarding the cluster model in a diverse school setting? It seems like a massive undertaking to properly instruct the level IV curriculum while supporting the learning needs of ELLs, SWD, struggling learners, and those on grade level. How does this possibly work?