Anonymous wrote:The level really does mean grade level. So if a student's overall score is level 5 that means 5th grade.
http://www.casamples.com/downloads/i-Ready_DiagnosticPositionPaper_090914.pdf
This explains how the scoring works and is from Curriculum Associates who created I-ready.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^Being smarter and having more knowledge are two completely different things. [/quote
I think the point was how or why would you even have this thought process about your child especially at the age of 7 or 8? You have ascertained that your second grade child shows a better ability to aquire and apply knowledge than you? Come on...
Good grief! My child is more advanced than I was at that age and has a higher IQ than I do. I would imagine that a lot of parents could say the same thing. Your entire tangent about adults and IQs seems like a non-sequitur in this discussion pertaining to i-ready and whether a child could plausibly be multiple grade levels ahead.
No..I would imagine not a lot of parents compare their IQ to their children's. In fact not many people in the normal population have a reason to have their IQ tested. This comment was attached to a post that brought up IQ so not really a non sequitur....
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^Being smarter and having more knowledge are two completely different things. [/quote
I think the point was how or why would you even have this thought process about your child especially at the age of 7 or 8? You have ascertained that your second grade child shows a better ability to aquire and apply knowledge than you? Come on...
Good grief! My child is more advanced than I was at that age and has a higher IQ than I do. I would imagine that a lot of parents could say the same thing. Your entire tangent about adults and IQs seems like a non-sequitur in this discussion pertaining to i-ready and whether a child could plausibly be multiple grade levels ahead.
No..I would imagine not a lot of parents compare their IQ to their children's. In fact not many people in the normal population have a reason to have their IQ tested. This comment was attached to a post that brought up IQ so not really a non sequitur....
Anonymous wrote:
How did you connect iReady specific to AAP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^Being smarter and having more knowledge are two completely different things. [/quote
I think the point was how or why would you even have this thought process about your child especially at the age of 7 or 8? You have ascertained that your second grade child shows a better ability to aquire and apply knowledge than you? Come on...
Good grief! My child is more advanced than I was at that age and has a higher IQ than I do. I would imagine that a lot of parents could say the same thing. Your entire tangent about adults and IQs seems like a non-sequitur in this discussion pertaining to i-ready and whether a child could plausibly be multiple grade levels ahead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
iReady creators thinks both scenarios are possible otherwise why bother about the levels? There is no way KG scoring 507-800 can be at Grade level 3. Hence Level 3 does not translate to Grade 3
Wrong! My kid in K absolutely knew how to do multi digit addition and subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions, and pretty much everything else in the 3rd grade curriculum. Yes, some kids actually are gifted or even highly gifted in math.
LOL
Again: How high did your child score? Let me guess: Your child was on-grade level, but you're convinced that your child is so super gifted that you can't conceive that other children are actually much more advanced and that your child is merely above average. The main problem with AAP these days seems to be that every parent with a slightly above average child is convinced that the child is highly gifted.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^Being smarter and having more knowledge are two completely different things. [/quote
I think the point was how or why would you even have this thought process about your child especially at the age of 7 or 8? You have ascertained that your second grade child shows a better ability to aquire and apply knowledge than you? Come on...
+1
Anonymous wrote:^Being smarter and having more knowledge are two completely different things. [/quote
I think the point was how or why would you even have this thought process about your child especially at the age of 7 or 8? You have ascertained that your second grade child shows a better ability to aquire and apply knowledge than you? Come on...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There are many kids in this forum who scores WISC of 130+. Here is modern IQ ranges for various occupations
http://www.iqcomparisonsite.com/occupations.aspx
Do you think this child is smarter than engineers/lawyers/doctors? These tests are relative to age hence Level 5 can not translate to Grade 5 math.
What point are you trying to make here? Your chart shows that the 75th percentile for every single occupation is well below 130, and very few occupations even have people at the 95th percentile for that profession above 130. But FWIW, I'm both an engineer and a lawyer, and yes, my child is smarter than I am.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
iReady creators thinks both scenarios are possible otherwise why bother about the levels? There is no way KG scoring 507-800 can be at Grade level 3. Hence Level 3 does not translate to Grade 3
Wrong! My kid in K absolutely knew how to do multi digit addition and subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions, and pretty much everything else in the 3rd grade curriculum. Yes, some kids actually are gifted or even highly gifted in math.
LOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Max level that any child can cross is three level above. Your child must have taken at-home test scoring 4+ level.
Technically, he's 3 levels above, but his score is more than 40 points higher than the cutoff score for Level 5.
So you concluded your DC is in Grade 5!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
iReady creators thinks both scenarios are possible otherwise why bother about the levels? There is no way KG scoring 507-800 can be at Grade level 3. Hence Level 3 does not translate to Grade 3
Wrong! My kid in K absolutely knew how to do multi digit addition and subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions, and pretty much everything else in the 3rd grade curriculum. Yes, some kids actually are gifted or even highly gifted in math.