Becky2005
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2004
- Messages
- 5,982
I agree. There's something wrong if everyone (or everyone except one boy) failed.
I agree -- the ratio should be the opposite, everyone passed except 1, maybe 2 but if say you have 30 kids in your class and 29 of them fail -- there is a problem!
One solution: My DD's school has 2 teachers that teach Algebra II, they will allow students to attend tutoring of either teacher. Sometimes hearing the material from another teacher can help the concept to be learned.
This is true too. During DD's 7th grade she was getting a C in Science, the science teacher went on maternity leave & all of a sudden my DD was getting A's. When I questioned her about it, the answer I got was the new teacher explained things in ways DD understood it so much better. It was the same material but the way it was taught DD grasps the concepts more with the different teacher.