Common core nightmare
My daughter is in the top 1% of students her age. Imagine my shock when I discovered that she does not know how to do 'long' multiplication or division! (She is in 5th grade!). It's really frightening what Common core has done to our education system!
However, in your case in particular, I suggest you look into some of the online education (some are free) opportunities available, and allow your daughter to excel academically at her own pace, at home, and actually learn something. My Gifted/ADHD son almost flunked out of high school because he was so bored and always in trouble-online classes saved him. Now he's in medical school, even though his teachers all said he'd never amount to anything. If she doesn't want to miss out on being with her friends, it may be possible to negotiate an arrangement with her school to attend only part of the day so she can attend art, music, P.E. and other "elective" courses so that the school will still get their check from the state for her attendance, she will get to be with her friends, and she will be able to learn without the distraction of the nontraditional students in every classroom, who tend to disrupt things. I used to be a vigorous proponent of public school. Now, not so much, and I spent 30 years in the system. But things have changed SO much it's no fun anymore for the teachers OR the students. Meanwhile the taxpayers stand by scratching their heads and wondering what they're paying for when 50% of kids graduate without being able to read or do a simple math problem. I also encourage you to enroll her in extra curricular activities (art classes at the Institute, acting, dance, sports) for the social and creative exposure she needs. I imagine in the LA area there are many to choose from that cost less than private school tuition. If all else fails, move to Missouri where we stopped Common Core in its tracks and still offer gifted classes for kids who qualify in most districts. Good luck!
https://www.khanacademy.org/about/our-co...
What does it mean when you say she is in the top 1%? Certainly not that she can do the most situps! How was this measured, and by whom?
I will caution you that sometimes the way statistics lie about students is to measure performance rather than ability. In many circumstances, a student who works like the dickens and is not that smart will test well. Zenphamy's question was great. How, _of your own knowledge_, do you know that she cannot do long division or multiplication, and what does that say about her general intelligence?
Until I know more [I taught brilliant students, some her age, fun stuff for 20+ years], I have something for you to consider. If we're talking about IQ, even leaving aside the fact that the tests become less accurate the further one goes from the center, Mensa [the high IQ organization] starts giving you membership at IQ 125, or 25 points off the norm - the top 2%.
If you were dealing with a student who was 35 points off the norm the other way [that is, an IQ score, if you could get one, of 65] they would have specialists crawling all over them to "Help them function in the real world" - and kids like your daughter are, at best, ignored. Why? Because everybody knows they'll "make it". They'll "manage". They can help the slower students. gag.
Start looking into your options NOW. Online schools, charter schools [if your state has them], private schools, homeschooling.
I believe that public schools destroy every single thing they touch - students, teachers, parents, taxpayers, everything. I really want to say "Grab you daughter and RUN!!!!"
they must have changed, or the test has. -- j
p.s. had another friend who claimed 165, and zany
was a good, fun adjective ... quite a fast thinker,
like many here in the gulch!!! goooood company!
I was thinking of a teaching career in what was then called "special education." These were what today we would call special needs kids. I quickly realized that teaching them the three R's wasn't going to work. Instead I worked on how to make change from a dollar. How and when to get off and on a bus. How to be polite. The principle wrote me up for not following the lesson plan. There's more to the story, but that's the essence of it. I never became a teacher. In later years I did a little research on public schools and was appalled by what I discovered Common Core is merely the government supporting that principle so long ago.
What has this proven to our socialist elite? It would be really beneficial to their cause (of control) if more of us were dumbed down some more.
Hence such nifty tools as Common Core.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=icmRCixQ...
cheers
http://reason.com/search?q=cesar+chavez&...
http://reason.com/blog/2014/03/29/would-...
But the legend...
Cheers
Cheers
Cheers
Is it not safe to assume that government can't be trusted to do what they say...even back in the Regan days. Was there even a mapped out plan for how this border seal was going to happen? He pandered.
I have a premiere to get to. Leave me alone. :)
While he wasn't a saint he was entirely American, America oriented, and the last honorable President we had.
On a brighter note (for me anyway): I took my family to see Great White and Slaughter at the Gila River Casino last week, I'm taking my son to see Rival Sons in downtown phoenix next week, and then taking my son to see BB King at Comerica on the 27th. :)
I write homework assignments for my kids using mathematics in subjects they are interested in. It is working well.
Is there an adult in the world who uses math to pass a test as a regular activity? Uh, no.
We already know that people learn things better when THEY are interested in the subject the learning is part of.
oh, good for you!!!!
Oh, did I mention it's free? (Bill Gates dumped a bunch of money on them, so not free as in lunch, more like free as in a producer willfully gave because it made him happy to do so)
Common Core standard 4.NBT.B.6 states in part, "Find whole-number quotients and remainders with up to four-digit dividends and one-digit divisors, using strategies based on place value," or in other words know how to do long division.
The 4 at the beginning of the references means that these are a 4th grade level standards.
If students haven't been taught how to do long multiplication and division by the end of the 4th grade, then it is because the school is NOT following the Common Core standards.
Let me make this absolutely clear. The Common Core Standard says students should know how to do long division by the end of the 4th grade (at the latest). You feel that your 5th grade daughter should know how to do long division. You agree with the Common Core Standard regarding long division.
My feelings about Common Core aren't simply for or against. When I saw your complaint I figured I'd look up what the Common Core Standard was regarding long division. Apparently I'm the only one in this forum who thinks we should read what the standards actually say before making a judgement call. I think the hatred of Common Core has reach a fanatical level, so much so that when anything even seems to be wrong in education, it will be blamed on Common Core.
I am a math tutor. I don't like the government takeover of education. I intend to homeschool my children. My wife and I will teach them according to their needs.
Mathematics is only as complicated as you want to make it, people. The best mathematics teachers and professors I ever had were those who explained things in the simplest terms. Intentionally obfuscating the meanings of simple principles by couching them in other terms is reprehensible to the knowledge seeker.
Perhaps you can allow her to flee to the middle of the country for a summer or two in one of our "gulches" when she is a bit older.
The experience will teach her life skills that she won't get elsewhere.
Common Core will eliminate any competition for the elite from the proles.
We don't need any Henry Reardens rocking the boat (and changing the zero sum to a positive.)
Queue up for the food stamps, potential producers!
US elected "public servants" treat US soldiers with very little respect and send them to die without learning from history of the region or considering the constituionality.
Before you pull the trigger, make sure your sights are on the proper target, wired1.