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Why would a teacher lower a kid's reading material
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:11 pm
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:11 pm
When he is reading and comprehending 1-2 years above his grade level? Same thing for his younger sister. Are they maybe, with other students, inflating reading scores for their entire grade level and losing state or fed money for disadvantaged readers? What gives?
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:13 pm to TigerFanDan
Sorry but lil Dan aint the genius you think he is
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:14 pm to TigerFanDan
This would be a great question to ask the teacher
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:24 pm to TigerFanDan
He's showing up his classmates, hurting their self-esteem
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:37 pm to TigerFanDan
Public or private?
Public schools teach to to middle to low end of the class the advanced kids get jammed up and bored because they are being taught a slower pace.
Private school breaks the kids into classes according to ability.
You cant expect the slower kids to keep up w/ the advanced kids and you can't expect to keep the advanced kids engaged when not achieving potential.
Public schools teach to to middle to low end of the class the advanced kids get jammed up and bored because they are being taught a slower pace.
Private school breaks the kids into classes according to ability.
You cant expect the slower kids to keep up w/ the advanced kids and you can't expect to keep the advanced kids engaged when not achieving potential.
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:42 pm to TigerFanDan
I’ve got a senior this year and another in 6th. What I can tell you with certainty about education is to let it go. Even at its worst education in the US is the most tried method of sharing knowledge. It’s not perfect and if you try to make it that way it’ll drive you insane. Little Johnny is gonna be fine because it sounds like he has good parents.
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:44 pm to TigerFanDan
Perhaps the parents should take said child to a library so he can check out more challenging literature.
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:46 pm to TigerFanDan
quote:
When he is reading and comprehending 1-2 years above his grade level?
Based on what metrics? Also, literacy involves a number of complex tasks. Are you sure your kid is performing at a high level across the board? Or just in Lexile score and basic comprehension?
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:47 pm to TigerFanDan
The reading programs the kids are following don’t do this. They read at their level and continue to progress. All of it is on the computer so I’m not sure what you would be referring to? Are the kids reading and covering a story as a group?
Posted on 10/2/25 at 9:48 pm to TigerFanDan
quote:that's it?
When he is reading and comprehending 1-2 years above his grade level?
Posted on 10/2/25 at 10:40 pm to AndyJ
quote:did you not understand the question? Apparently you have a comprehension problem.
Lil dan ain't the genius you think he is
Posted on 10/2/25 at 10:53 pm to TigerFanDan
I’m a little confused. Are you asking/saying that it appears the school is inflating test scores by lowering the difficulty of material tested? If that’s what you’re asking - then it’s a definite yes. Ben Carson spoke on this year almost a decade ago and worth a listen if you’ve never heard it.
Posted on 10/3/25 at 6:25 am to TigerFanDan
Would you expound on what you mean by lowering their reading material? When I was a kid, there were the books that were assigned and taught, then there was Accelerated Reading requirements. The former was set and the latter was whatever I wanted it to be. So I’m not understanding what you’re saying is happening.
Posted on 10/3/25 at 9:25 am to Joshjrn
The kids read from books at the grade level chosen by the teacher and are tested on comprehension. The teacher said he must use books for a 3rd to 5th grade level. He is in the 5th grade and reads and understands material written for 6th to 7th grade students. She did this to my grandson and to my granddaughter who is in the 4th grade. Why lower the standards for children that excel?
Posted on 10/3/25 at 9:34 am to TigerFanDan
quote:
The kids read from books at the grade level chosen by the teacher and are tested on comprehension. The teacher said he must use books for a 3rd to 5th grade level. He is in the 5th grade and reads and understands material written for 6th to 7th grade students. She did this to my grandson and to my granddaughter who is in the 4th grade. Why lower the standards for children that excel?
My kids' (1st and 4th) school does the same thing but they dont tell them they cant go above their reading level.. thats just dumb.
I have heard several parents talking about kids listening to audio books that are way above their reading level while sitting in the carpool line.. To me thats some bullshite
Posted on 10/3/25 at 9:36 am to TigerFanDan
quote:
The kids read from books at the grade level chosen by the teacher and are tested on comprehension. The teacher said he must use books for a 3rd to 5th grade level. He is in the 5th grade and reads and understands material written for 6th to 7th grade students. She did this to my grandson and to my granddaughter who is in the 4th grade. Why lower the standards for children that excel?
Sounds like you're dealing with an idiot who is teaching to a very rigid curriculum they don't really understand.
With that said, take some advice from someone who has tested off the charts for "reading level" their entire lives: be really careful about pushing kids into reading "above their grade level". I'm certainly not saying they should never do it, but it shouldn't be all they read. I stopped reading for pleasure for the better part of a decade because, while I understood every word of what I read, I wasn't in a place in life to understand the themes that were being conveyed, so I didn't enjoy reading anymore. Don't push your kids into that trap. It's vastly more important that they read constantly than it is for them to read "hard" books.
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