Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school is doing CKLA but the high achieving kids are grouped together. The teacher who has that class is really good and does some really creative stuff to make learning interesting. She is also very strict so I know the kids behave well for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm skeptical that CES is much different from home school.
This will likely depend on what the home school is planning to do for literacy enrichment and whether they continue to offer the ELC or not. What are folks hearing from your schools about that?
This is the new ELC model. Still a separate class for high achievers, but with CKLA and moves faster than "regular" classes to cover more content. Actually seems much better with old ELC curriculum.
Are they actually competing the kids together? When I asked my school they said that there would be a weekly pull-out during the Flex Time for novel studies but not that it would be a separate class. That is mostly why I’m leaning towards accepting the CES spot over staying at the local school. The cohort is so important
That's the other model for enrichment that is not ELC. (There are two models.) If there are enough kids to form a class, then next year at least, they should be offered the new ELC (which is based on CKLA but moves faster -- similar to how 4/5 and 5/6 math move faster).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are the kids in the same school one get 218 got in and one got 230 didn’t? This is too ridiculous.
I have an idea. They could do away with these BS magnet programs and kids could just stay at their schools instead of being divided up every couple of years. MCPS creates artificial scarcity by gatekeeping their enriched curriculum at CES programs when they could just offer it at all schools.
Anonymous wrote:How are the kids in the same school one get 218 got in and one got 230 didn’t? This is too ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school is doing CKLA but the high achieving kids are grouped together. The teacher who has that class is really good and does some really creative stuff to make learning interesting. She is also very strict so I know the kids behave well for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm skeptical that CES is much different from home school.
This will likely depend on what the home school is planning to do for literacy enrichment and whether they continue to offer the ELC or not. What are folks hearing from your schools about that?
This is the new ELC model. Still a separate class for high achievers, but with CKLA and moves faster than "regular" classes to cover more content. Actually seems much better with old ELC curriculum.
Are they actually competing the kids together? When I asked my school they said that there would be a weekly pull-out during the Flex Time for novel studies but not that it would be a separate class. That is mostly why I’m leaning towards accepting the CES spot over staying at the local school. The cohort is so important
That's the other model for enrichment that is not ELC. (There are two models.) If there are enough kids to form a class, then next year at least, they should be offered the new ELC (which is based on CKLA but moves faster -- similar to how 4/5 and 5/6 math move faster).
Okay, so just to confirm, you're saying central office has told schools that starting this coming fall, they have two choices: a weekly pull-out enrichment option, or a cohorted class doing CKLA in an accelerated way? But they are not allowed to choose to offer the old version of ELC (the one that CES does) or any other enrichment option? Is that right?
Yes, that is what they are saying. But anyone who knows MCPS also knows that central office has "guidelines" that schools may or may not follow. So you will definitely want to confirm all this with your local school and the Office of Accelerated and Enriched Instruction.
If this is true, parents should complain. The whole point of ELC was to deliver the same level of curriculum and depth as is offered in the CES. There is no reason that the curriculum used by CES and ELC should be different.
Anonymous wrote:My child who scored a 223 also loves to read and will read everyday on her own. I am trying to get her to read higher level stuff but she re reads Diary of a Wimpy Kid over and over. The biggest thing that I think helped is that her school has WIN time so she is in a small group working on a 4th grade level packet of material. WIN time is roughly 30 minutes 4 days a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.
Ours bounces around in the high 90s (99 in the fall, 96 this past winter) and this is it for us as well. She likes to read, she likes to be read to, it's what she does with her time. We don't do anything conscious to support it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.
Ours bounces around in the high 90s (99 in the fall, 96 this past winter) and this is it for us as well. She likes to read, she likes to be read to, it's what she does with her time. We don't do anything conscious to support it.
Anonymous wrote:How are the kids in the same school one get 218 got in and one got 230 didn’t? This is too ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.
Ours bounces around in the high 90s (99 in the fall, 96 this past winter) and this is it for us as well. She likes to read, she likes to be read to, it's what she does with her time. We don't do anything conscious to support it.
Do kids reading themselves improve writing & comprehension? Jump dump books in front of them to read without parent involvement ? My kids MAP R is in 80 but he loves to read as well.
I'd guess that the answer is that dumping books in front of them works for some kids but not others, which is unhelpful but also true of most approaches. I was also a high achiever in reading as a kid without any kind of support other than that I liked to read, so I'm not surprised that my kid turned out the same way, but I'm also sure there are kids who would get nothing out of that.
I will say my daughter's comprehension is great and her writing is so so. Her writing grades are lower than her reading grades and she tends to do the bare minimum when asked to write at school. I think some of that is usual kid rushing through her work issues, and some of it is that she has trouble with expressing herself; her constant reading hasn't changed that at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.
Ours bounces around in the high 90s (99 in the fall, 96 this past winter) and this is it for us as well. She likes to read, she likes to be read to, it's what she does with her time. We don't do anything conscious to support it.
Do kids reading themselves improve writing & comprehension? Jump dump books in front of them to read without parent involvement ? My kids MAP R is in 80 but he loves to read as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry...where in ParentVue is this posted?
Click on name of your 3rd grader then select “documents” , and it is listed at the top of documents queue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.
Ours bounces around in the high 90s (99 in the fall, 96 this past winter) and this is it for us as well. She likes to read, she likes to be read to, it's what she does with her time. We don't do anything conscious to support it.
Do kids reading themselves improve writing & comprehension? Jump dump books in front of them to read without parent involvement ? My kids MAP R is in 80 but he loves to read as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.
Ours bounces around in the high 90s (99 in the fall, 96 this past winter) and this is it for us as well. She likes to read, she likes to be read to, it's what she does with her time. We don't do anything conscious to support it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do many kids get high 90 in MAP R, especially 99 percent? Tutoring or extra reading? I am shocked that many gets high 90 score?
My child just loves to read. Whenever he is at home, he just reads. Or will read in the car while going to activities.
And we go to the library whenever we don't have any plans over the weekend.