Anonymous wrote:What about those kids who already recognize numbers up to 1000 at three? I have one.
Does the child have a true sense of what "1000" is? Recognizing the numeral is not the same as understanding the number.
Anonymous wrote:Kindergarten is where my child became good friends with many of the students he still has in 4th grade. Not sure why there's so much focus on the academics unless you're at a really bad school.
What about those kids who already recognize numbers up to 1000 at three? I have one.
Anonymous wrote:What about those kids who already recognize numbers up to 1000 at three? I have one.
Anonymous wrote:What about those kids who already recognize numbers up to 1000 at three? I have one.
Anonymous wrote:Counting by rote and then actually being able to singularly recognize 2 digit numbers is another thing.
I think the common core is looking to get kids the later skill.
My friend was always going on and on about her brilliant K child and how ridiculous it was that her special snowflake had to waste time learning to count. We got in an elevataor together and her DD asked which floor. I told her "21" and her kid couldn't recognize the number. She could say and count out 21 items but she actually understand the concept of the number 21 with out "20, 21, 22, 23" and she didn't realize that it's made up of 2 tens and 1 one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - that may be one of their goals for K math - but it likely isn't the only goal. I know they are working on other things in our DD's K class that are math related.
+1
Right now, DC's class just finished learning about patterns (A/B/A/B vs A/B/B/A/B/B) and are now working on representing a number in various ways (drawing 5 fingers, drawing 5 boxes).
I just saw my child's pre-K teaching AB Patterns yesterday, when I picked up DC. She is 4.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - that may be one of their goals for K math - but it likely isn't the only goal. I know they are working on other things in our DD's K class that are math related.
+1
Right now, DC's class just finished learning about patterns (A/B/A/B vs A/B/B/A/B/B) and are now working on representing a number in various ways (drawing 5 fingers, drawing 5 boxes).
I just saw my child's pre-K teaching AB Patterns yesterday, when I picked up DC. She is 4.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - that may be one of their goals for K math - but it likely isn't the only goal. I know they are working on other things in our DD's K class that are math related.
+1
Right now, DC's class just finished learning about patterns (A/B/A/B vs A/B/B/A/B/B) and are now working on representing a number in various ways (drawing 5 fingers, drawing 5 boxes).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember that common core encompasses more than just the children of two college/advanced degree families. There are tons of kids from less privileged backgrounds who absolutely have not had exposure enough to be able to do this.
Yes, exactly.
It is Common Core. Not "this is the highest level of achievement we expect out of anyone." Common= everyone. Core=basic or minimum standard.
OP, if you are concerned, the question you should ask at open houses is, "I understand that you are using Common Core as your standard. How do you assess and differentiate in the classroom, considering that students come to kindergarten with different levels of school readiness?"