Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine has read most of the classics. He’s starting to translate them into Greek now for a hobby
Mine too - he does Latin also but, remember, THIS IS NOT NORMAL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine has read most of the classics. He’s starting to translate them into Greek now for a hobby
Ancient Greek or Modern Greek? Mine did both and then discovered a passion for Cuneiform. The clay tablets take up so much space in the study. Ugh. #dcumproblems, amirite?
My first grader just embarked on Mahabharata, but only because she so enjoyed working through translating Bhagavad Gita first.
Had she not been asking me for more epics on and on after devouring all of the classics back in K, I never would've moved on to the translations. I want her to be self-motivated, of course.
Anonymous wrote:I'm just trying to get a sense of where my 1st grader is in terms of reading and her teacher is not very communicative. My kid can read Dear Dragon books and Elephant & Piggy pretty fluently. Anything harder than that requires bribes and she's very intimidated by long blocks of text--i.e. she refuses to read Frog & Toad, even though I think she could sound out all of the words because she says there are "too many words on each page." She can get through scholastic "F" and "G" level books, but struggles with those.
What books can your 1st grader read?
Anonymous wrote:Mine is obsessed with David Foster Wallace’s ramblings
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Literally anything she wants. She has read the entire Percy Jackson series and series made for kids mythology chapter books.
BUT THIS IS NOT NORMAL.
How are her reading test scores/what level does it say on her report card?
Cool
OP, you are fine. I had one of these first graders like the Percy Jackson mom. Guess what? By 2nd or 3rd grade, most everyone knows how to read, and nobody cares that your kid used to be the first one reading chapter books.
Barring the true cases of 99th percentile IQ highly gifted children who go to special schools for the highly gifted, the 7 year olds supposedly reading Percy Jackson and Harry Potter aren't fully understanding it all. My DD could also "read" such books, as in open the page and say the words without stumbling. But the vocabulary and the situations and the subtle humor went over her head many times. I've only met two kids who really could read-read these books in 1st grade without needing someone to re-explain anything in simpler terms. Always take the anonymous stranger anecdotes with a grain of salt when it comes to these 'what is your child reading?' threads.
The 99th percentile isn’t that rare. To state the obvious, in an average elementary school that has 100 first graders, one will be in the 99th percentile. They don’t have to go to special schools for the highly gifted to understand Percy Jackson in the first grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine has read most of the classics. He’s starting to translate them into Greek now for a hobby
Ancient Greek or Modern Greek? Mine did both and then discovered a passion for Cuneiform. The clay tablets take up so much space in the study. Ugh. #dcumproblems, amirite?
My first grader just embarked on Mahabharata, but only because she so enjoyed working through translating Bhagavad Gita first.
Had she not been asking me for more epics on and on after devouring all of the classics back in K, I never would've moved on to the translations. I want her to be self-motivated, of course.
Is this an Indian joke? It went over my head
NP but it's an educated person joke. Not Indian and I got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine has read most of the classics. He’s starting to translate them into Greek now for a hobby
Ancient Greek or Modern Greek? Mine did both and then discovered a passion for Cuneiform. The clay tablets take up so much space in the study. Ugh. #dcumproblems, amirite?
My first grader just embarked on Mahabharata, but only because she so enjoyed working through translating Bhagavad Gita first.
Had she not been asking me for more epics on and on after devouring all of the classics back in K, I never would've moved on to the translations. I want her to be self-motivated, of course.
Is this an Indian joke? It went over my head