Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The point is that there are baseline issues if your child failed. Knowing that ASAP is pretty important. I don't think you need to know how well they did if they passed, but parents of kids who failed should be able to know or be told by teachers quickly. I don't see the argument why beyond kids who are in the retake window (and they are informed quickly).
But why do you need to be told "quickly?" All scores will be posted in SIS the week of 6/12. That's enough time for you to email the school if you see your kid failed and ask for the SDBQ which will tell you the standard for each question your child got wrong. Then you can use that information to remediate your child over the summer should you deem that necessary.
Knowing that score a week or two prior to that 6/12 window will not make any difference in your plan of action.
Anonymous wrote:The point is that there are baseline issues if your child failed. Knowing that ASAP is pretty important. I don't think you need to know how well they did if they passed, but parents of kids who failed should be able to know or be told by teachers quickly. I don't see the argument why beyond kids who are in the retake window (and they are informed quickly).
Anonymous wrote:The point is that there are baseline issues if your child failed. Knowing that ASAP is pretty important. I don't think you need to know how well they did if they passed, but parents of kids who failed should be able to know or be told by teachers quickly. I don't see the argument why beyond kids who are in the retake window (and they are informed quickly).
Anonymous wrote:In ES, the SOL is not a score for your DC - it’s a score for the school. The only impact is on the school.
Anonymous wrote:We all know they know. So, this means he failed and didn't land in the retake window, right? She said that "SOL scores are released by the state and county" but really, let's be honest here. Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The middle school teachers have told kids scores. The teachers definitely know. Again I wish there was some consistency
This is what I don’t understand - if middle and high schools can share, why can’t elementary?
I know - it's stupid. The teachers know the scores the day after the tests are taken. I think it's stupid that test scores are knowable and they keep from the parents. I think if a test score can be known - it should be given to parent.
Just because you want something doesn’t mean you get it. The entitlement is gross. There’s no need for you to have it immediately. You just want to know. Meanwhile, there are kids still testing. There are kids who have to do retakes. There are kids who have to do make-ups.
If you’re this upset over a stupid SOL score, wait until your kid takes the AP exam. You have to wait 2 months. The horror!
correct! The entire yearly curriculum revolves around the SOLs. Period! The SOLs are all taught by the beginning of May and the last 6 weeks are about marshaling everyone through the practice, the tests, remediation, and any retakes. Not much new material AT ALL happening in May or June at our elementary school.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school was taking SOLs during the week of May 7th. Parents will get results by June 16th. That’s 6 weeks later. This way parents can’t schedule teacher-parent conferences and don’t have time to complain to the admin or seek remediation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t the score be posted to SIS? I don’t understand why they hoard the data preventing you from supplementing right away. It’s the deep failing kids that are losing out.
It will be during the last week of school.
It’s 5 weeks.
Who cares whether or not your kid passed? It has nothing to do with passing to the next grade. It’s a poorly written test and not a true measure of anything significant. Chill out.
If no one cares, then why do the schools make such a big fuss over preparing for them in class, taking practice tests, and even offering retakes for some kids who fail? They are a big deal for schools. Parents should get the results right away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school was taking SOLs during the week of May 7th. Parents will get results by June 16th. That’s 6 weeks later. This way parents can’t schedule teacher-parent conferences and don’t have time to complain to the admin or seek remediation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t the score be posted to SIS? I don’t understand why they hoard the data preventing you from supplementing right away. It’s the deep failing kids that are losing out.
It will be during the last week of school.
It’s 5 weeks.
Who cares whether or not your kid passed? It has nothing to do with passing to the next grade. It’s a poorly written test and not a true measure of anything significant. Chill out.
Anonymous wrote:Our school was taking SOLs during the week of May 7th. Parents will get results by June 16th. That’s 6 weeks later. This way parents can’t schedule teacher-parent conferences and don’t have time to complain to the admin or seek remediation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t the score be posted to SIS? I don’t understand why they hoard the data preventing you from supplementing right away. It’s the deep failing kids that are losing out.
It will be during the last week of school.
Our school was taking SOLs during the week of May 7th. Parents will get results by June 16th. That’s 6 weeks later. This way parents can’t schedule teacher-parent conferences and don’t have time to complain to the admin or seek remediation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t the score be posted to SIS? I don’t understand why they hoard the data preventing you from supplementing right away. It’s the deep failing kids that are losing out.
It will be during the last week of school.
Anonymous wrote:Can’t the score be posted to SIS? I don’t understand why they hoard the data preventing you from supplementing right away. It’s the deep failing kids that are losing out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why in the world would you ask about this here? Call the school office and ask the principal. Not that hard.
800 children attend my child's school. Do you know how disruptive and ridiculous it would be for even half of us to demand 20 minutes of the principal's time to address our concerns? It would literally be inhumanly impossible to address the avalanche of Karen and Kens.
Some of us are not garbage people but would appreciate the scores nonetheless.
It’s pretty ridiculous to call someone “garbage” just for daring to ask a question about their child’s test scores.