Anonymous wrote:I just don't buy for a second that a kid who is that far ahead in reading with apparently that high of an IQ is just perfectly fine in regular school. It would be like spending 7 hours/day staring at the walls, watching the paint dry. I mean, can you imagine a child who is reading Lord of the Rings in K sitting through the "A says aaah" lessons, or the "See Dick Run" stuff?
I think PP could stand to be less blasé about her DD's education. The kid must be bored out of her mind and learning nothing at all at school. Why is this acceptable to PP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child isn’t in AAP. She isn’t in a gifted program at all. I’m not lying. I’ve briefly posted about my dd before. She was independently tested by an outside team. Her teachers have always thrown up their arms. There has been nothing they can do. She is also ahead in math.
It’s true that the further removed I become from her early milestones the more remarkable they seem to me. I have other kids! She’s my oldest. But when she was doing these things I thought I was delusional.
It's not that I doubt the existence of kids who are profoundly gifted. I question your portrayal of your DD on this forum. If she had a team of psychologists testing her at an early age and had teachers who found her so far beyond the curriculum that they had no idea how to even approach her, then there's no way you would imagine that there are tons of kids out there just like your DD. If your DD is as gifted as you claim, you're being weirdly disingenuous about the whole thing. The smartest kid in the grade is probably reading Harry Potter in 1st or K. It wouldn't at all strike you as odd if your kid is sitting next to that kid, reading War and Peace or some other full-fledged adult novel? I mean, really?
I don’t really know what you mean by the bolded. DD didn’t read an adult novel until 3rd grade I think.
She was at least 6 years ahead in reading at age 4 and she has remained that way. Her comprehension is extremely advanced and remarkable. I never said it wasn’t. I felt like I alluded to it enough when I described how she sat for hours at a time at barely two to listen to chapter books. We didn’t know it at the time. But if you’ve been around a lot of 2yos you learn that’s very abnormal! She has a high IQ, but how am I supposed to act? How are her teachers supposed to act? She’s just a kid. She goes to normal school. Her teachers were not about to give her a 6th grade curriculum so a good K curriculum was just as good as anything in between. We don’t have a gifted program so there isn’t any posturing to be had here. You all could learn to be a little more blasé if you ask me.
So you don’t have a gifted program? Why are you on an AAP forum then? I don’t understand.
Anonymous wrote:
I don’t really know what you mean by the bolded. DD didn’t read an adult novel until 3rd grade I think.
She was at least 6 years ahead in reading at age 4 and she has remained that way. Her comprehension is extremely advanced and remarkable. I never said it wasn’t. I felt like I alluded to it enough when I described how she sat for hours at a time at barely two to listen to chapter books. We didn’t know it at the time. But if you’ve been around a lot of 2yos you learn that’s very abnormal! She has a high IQ, but how am I supposed to act? How are her teachers supposed to act? She’s just a kid. She goes to normal school. Her teachers were not about to give her a 6th grade curriculum so a good K curriculum was just as good as anything in between. We don’t have a gifted program so there isn’t any posturing to be had here. You all could learn to be a little more blasé if you ask me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child isn’t in AAP. She isn’t in a gifted program at all. I’m not lying. I’ve briefly posted about my dd before. She was independently tested by an outside team. Her teachers have always thrown up their arms. There has been nothing they can do. She is also ahead in math.
It’s true that the further removed I become from her early milestones the more remarkable they seem to me. I have other kids! She’s my oldest. But when she was doing these things I thought I was delusional.
It's not that I doubt the existence of kids who are profoundly gifted. I question your portrayal of your DD on this forum. If she had a team of psychologists testing her at an early age and had teachers who found her so far beyond the curriculum that they had no idea how to even approach her, then there's no way you would imagine that there are tons of kids out there just like your DD. If your DD is as gifted as you claim, you're being weirdly disingenuous about the whole thing. The smartest kid in the grade is probably reading Harry Potter in 1st or K. It wouldn't at all strike you as odd if your kid is sitting next to that kid, reading War and Peace or some other full-fledged adult novel? I mean, really?
I don’t really know what you mean by the bolded. DD didn’t read an adult novel until 3rd grade I think.
She was at least 6 years ahead in reading at age 4 and she has remained that way. Her comprehension is extremely advanced and remarkable. I never said it wasn’t. I felt like I alluded to it enough when I described how she sat for hours at a time at barely two to listen to chapter books. We didn’t know it at the time. But if you’ve been around a lot of 2yos you learn that’s very abnormal! She has a high IQ, but how am I supposed to act? How are her teachers supposed to act? She’s just a kid. She goes to normal school. Her teachers were not about to give her a 6th grade curriculum so a good K curriculum was just as good as anything in between. We don’t have a gifted program so there isn’t any posturing to be had here. You all could learn to be a little more blasé if you ask me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child isn’t in AAP. She isn’t in a gifted program at all. I’m not lying. I’ve briefly posted about my dd before. She was independently tested by an outside team. Her teachers have always thrown up their arms. There has been nothing they can do. She is also ahead in math.
It’s true that the further removed I become from her early milestones the more remarkable they seem to me. I have other kids! She’s my oldest. But when she was doing these things I thought I was delusional.
It's not that I doubt the existence of kids who are profoundly gifted. I question your portrayal of your DD on this forum. If she had a team of psychologists testing her at an early age and had teachers who found her so far beyond the curriculum that they had no idea how to even approach her, then there's no way you would imagine that there are tons of kids out there just like your DD. If your DD is as gifted as you claim, you're being weirdly disingenuous about the whole thing. The smartest kid in the grade is probably reading Harry Potter in 1st or K. It wouldn't at all strike you as odd if your kid is sitting next to that kid, reading War and Peace or some other full-fledged adult novel? I mean, really?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a huge difference between a 7 year old and a 4 year old.Anonymous wrote:
I know a 7yo who completed Algebra I with flying colors.
I didn’t draw this comparison. But a 5yo reading at a 6th grade level and a 1st grader finishing Algebra is roughly the same amount of acceleration. 6/7 years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Oh I agree. Her reading level was tested at 6th grade at the time. But she’s not the most gifted child I know. And I only know a few kids. She could read a few pages at a time but they were reading together. Im sure there exist kids who are much more advanced than my dd.
A 6th grade reading level at age 4 is so extraordinarily rare that there's no way you would have encountered kids who are more advanced than that. It's like saying that your 4 year old just passed Honors Algebra, but it's no big deal because you know of a few 4 year olds in Geometry. Having a child in the 99.999th percentile is at least vaguely plausible. Acting as if it's no big deal and that you personally know several kids more advanced than your DD is not even remotely possible.
I know a 7yo who completed Algebra I with flying colors.
In public school? Or at Kimon?
Homeschool. AoPS Academy student.
Anonymous wrote:There's a huge difference between a 7 year old and a 4 year old.Anonymous wrote:
I know a 7yo who completed Algebra I with flying colors.
There's a huge difference between a 7 year old and a 4 year old.Anonymous wrote:
I know a 7yo who completed Algebra I with flying colors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Oh I agree. Her reading level was tested at 6th grade at the time. But she’s not the most gifted child I know. And I only know a few kids. She could read a few pages at a time but they were reading together. Im sure there exist kids who are much more advanced than my dd.
A 6th grade reading level at age 4 is so extraordinarily rare that there's no way you would have encountered kids who are more advanced than that. It's like saying that your 4 year old just passed Honors Algebra, but it's no big deal because you know of a few 4 year olds in Geometry. Having a child in the 99.999th percentile is at least vaguely plausible. Acting as if it's no big deal and that you personally know several kids more advanced than your DD is not even remotely possible.
I know a 7yo who completed Algebra I with flying colors.
In public school? Or at Kimon?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Oh I agree. Her reading level was tested at 6th grade at the time. But she’s not the most gifted child I know. And I only know a few kids. She could read a few pages at a time but they were reading together. Im sure there exist kids who are much more advanced than my dd.
A 6th grade reading level at age 4 is so extraordinarily rare that there's no way you would have encountered kids who are more advanced than that. It's like saying that your 4 year old just passed Honors Algebra, but it's no big deal because you know of a few 4 year olds in Geometry. Having a child in the 99.999th percentile is at least vaguely plausible. Acting as if it's no big deal and that you personally know several kids more advanced than your DD is not even remotely possible.
I know a 7yo who completed Algebra I with flying colors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Oh I agree. Her reading level was tested at 6th grade at the time. But she’s not the most gifted child I know. And I only know a few kids. She could read a few pages at a time but they were reading together. Im sure there exist kids who are much more advanced than my dd.
A 6th grade reading level at age 4 is so extraordinarily rare that there's no way you would have encountered kids who are more advanced than that. It's like saying that your 4 year old just passed Honors Algebra, but it's no big deal because you know of a few 4 year olds in Geometry. Having a child in the 99.999th percentile is at least vaguely plausible. Acting as if it's no big deal and that you personally know several kids more advanced than your DD is not even remotely possible.
Anonymous wrote:
LOL. Or had a copy of Lord of the Rings in K?! And she’s so gifted she’s not in AAP and not bored in all her classes?