Mickey'snewestfan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2005
- Messages
- 4,716
Last year my 5th grader took care of his homework totally on his own. Every few months I'd check in with his teacher who consistently told me that he was doing it all and well, and his report cards were always fine, so I was completely hands off.
This year we moved and he's at a new public middle school with a reputation for being much more academically rigorous than the old one. The first week of school he brings home a "review packet" of 5th grade math, with the instructions to just do 3 problems on each page (the kids who were in the school system last year had gotten the packet from their 5th grade teacher and had the whole summer to do it, new kids got it on the first day of school, hence the 3 problem thing). Anyway, about 1/2 the packet he was shaky on, the other 1/2 seems to be stuff he's never seen before. I showed it to a 5th grade teacher in my school (same district/curriculum as my old school) and he said that almost none of his 5th graders would be able to do it at the end of the year, as most of it was stuff they hadn't covered.
So, I emailed the teacher and said that a lot of it appeared to be new to him, that I wanted him to do the whole packet but that we'd need more time (it was 15 pages, and I'd have to teach him the skills before he could attempt most of the pages). She gave us an extra week, so we've been slowly working through it this weekend and will be done by Friday. She also offered to meet with me in 2 weeks after they're done with initial assessments, and gave me a sense of the order to do things in (e.g. first unit is graphing and data, so hit averages, and percents now, then comes decimals so review those next). I should add that he's very much an "on level" kid when it comes to this stuff. If he's seen it and it's been explained to him he can get it and retained it, but he's not able to figure out stuff he's never seen on his own the way a gifted kid might.
Since the culture of the DIS seems to pretty hands off parenting, I'm curious how most people here would handle it. So, here's a poll.
This year we moved and he's at a new public middle school with a reputation for being much more academically rigorous than the old one. The first week of school he brings home a "review packet" of 5th grade math, with the instructions to just do 3 problems on each page (the kids who were in the school system last year had gotten the packet from their 5th grade teacher and had the whole summer to do it, new kids got it on the first day of school, hence the 3 problem thing). Anyway, about 1/2 the packet he was shaky on, the other 1/2 seems to be stuff he's never seen before. I showed it to a 5th grade teacher in my school (same district/curriculum as my old school) and he said that almost none of his 5th graders would be able to do it at the end of the year, as most of it was stuff they hadn't covered.
So, I emailed the teacher and said that a lot of it appeared to be new to him, that I wanted him to do the whole packet but that we'd need more time (it was 15 pages, and I'd have to teach him the skills before he could attempt most of the pages). She gave us an extra week, so we've been slowly working through it this weekend and will be done by Friday. She also offered to meet with me in 2 weeks after they're done with initial assessments, and gave me a sense of the order to do things in (e.g. first unit is graphing and data, so hit averages, and percents now, then comes decimals so review those next). I should add that he's very much an "on level" kid when it comes to this stuff. If he's seen it and it's been explained to him he can get it and retained it, but he's not able to figure out stuff he's never seen on his own the way a gifted kid might.
Since the culture of the DIS seems to pretty hands off parenting, I'm curious how most people here would handle it. So, here's a poll.