Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know the percentile?
I just received our iready results for my 4th and 6th graders. They both scored higher than the fall window expected range but there is no percentile.
My 6th grader did better than my 4th. My 6th grader took forever taking his iready test. My 4th grader finished in an hour.
https://www.irwinelementary.org/ices/images/fy20/iReadyNorms.pdf
Do these percentiles seem off? My 3rd grader was overall “on grade level” in Math and overall “above grade level” in Reading but had a higher percentile in Math.
That makes sense, though. Kids who read a lot are often above grade level in reading. In math, usually kids need to be doing outside tutoring to be above grade level. So, it's reasonable that a larger percent of kids are above grade level readers than above grade level mathematicians.
Anonymous wrote:This is horrible test that gives you things above grade level and waits for you to fail to put you on an appropriate level. I had to sit with my kid and prevent him from choosing randomly. Many things he had no idea about.
The horrible thing is that it is used for math tracking in our district! Otherwise I wouldn’t care one bit.
Let the teacher handle it and relax and tell your kid not to rush but don’t sweat it. Thank you for the work you do!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know the percentile?
I just received our iready results for my 4th and 6th graders. They both scored higher than the fall window expected range but there is no percentile.
My 6th grader did better than my 4th. My 6th grader took forever taking his iready test. My 4th grader finished in an hour.
https://www.irwinelementary.org/ices/images/fy20/iReadyNorms.pdf
Do these percentiles seem off? My 3rd grader was overall “on grade level” in Math and overall “above grade level” in Reading but had a higher percentile in Math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know the percentile?
I just received our iready results for my 4th and 6th graders. They both scored higher than the fall window expected range but there is no percentile.
My 6th grader did better than my 4th. My 6th grader took forever taking his iready test. My 4th grader finished in an hour.
https://www.irwinelementary.org/ices/images/fy20/iReadyNorms.pdf
Anonymous wrote:How do you know the percentile?
I just received our iready results for my 4th and 6th graders. They both scored higher than the fall window expected range but there is no percentile.
My 6th grader did better than my 4th. My 6th grader took forever taking his iready test. My 4th grader finished in an hour.
Anonymous wrote:How are people getting their kids' iReady scores? Do some schools routinely release this information?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disappointing? Ok sure. Disastrous? It’s a fifth grade assessment test. Relax.
I can't remember if OP said that her kid was principal placed. A low iready could be disastrous for a principal placed kid if they remove the kid from the AAP classroom. If the kid is solidly in AAP, then the score won't have any impact. Kids who are below grade level and fail SOLs still can't be booted out of AAP.
Anonymous wrote:One should only care for results if they mean change in placement or some such. Otherwise it is just another practice for your child if done right, a meaningless thing if done wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Disappointing? Ok sure. Disastrous? It’s a fifth grade assessment test. Relax.