Not looking for a debate.
I truly don't understand the issue. I know many many people say they don't like it because they are teaching to a test. But isn't that the idea. We want kids to learn a certain set of concepts in each grade. So you test them on those concepts and thus it would seem to follow that you need to teach what is on the test. - What am I missing?
I have two kids (4th grade and 1st grade) and have no issues with what and/or how they are being taught.
Of course NCLB will be going away and that is one reason I don't believe the Feds should have any say in education. There can be a complete shift in approaches depending on the make-up of D.C. - But that is a topic for another thread.
Request that your school district do an Occupational Therapy evaluation on your child. Send the request in writing to your school districts special education department, CC it to your child's teacher and the building principal. The school district is required by law to test your child if you request the test in writing. Don't let them tell you that your child doesn't need it or won't qualify, once you ask the district must perform the evaluation.Children are being left behind. Mine included. She's a first grader with terrible handwritng. We work with her at home over and over and nothing has worked. According to her kindergarten teacher, the muscles in her hand are underdeveloped, making it hard for her to write. This year, she's way behind. When we asked the teacher about it, she informed us that handwriting was not a focus now as that it is not on the NCLB curriculum. She's great on her DIBELS and testing...you just can't read what she writes on it. But she gets the answers right, because so far most of it is oral.
Request that your school district do an Occupational Therapy evaluation on your child. Send the request in writing to your school districts special education department, CC it to your child's teacher and the building principal. The school district is required by law to test your child if you request the test in writing. Don't let them tell you that your child doesn't need it or won't qualify, once you ask the district must perform the evaluation.

Children are being left behind. Mine included. She's a first grader with terrible handwritng. We work with her at home over and over and nothing has worked. According to her kindergarten teacher, the muscles in her hand are underdeveloped, making it hard for her to write. This year, she's way behind. When we asked the teacher about it, she informed us that handwriting was not a focus now as that it is not on the NCLB curriculum. She's great on her DIBELS and testing...you just can't read what she writes on it. But she gets the answers right, because so far most of it is oral.
My nephew is on the other extreme. He skipped 3rd grade, is now in 4th. They've refused to skip him any more grades (which his parents agree with). But he is so far ahead of the others in his class, he is being left behind in a way. He's not learning anything, but instead is just floating through another grade. It's another stagnant year for him. Even his teacher has said that because of the NCLB, there has become a great divide between the brighter and the not as bright students.