torinsmom
<font color=red>I have someone coming to scoop<br>
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2004
- Messages
- 8,921
I don't think there's anything wrong with any teacher counting off for spelling, grammar and punctuation in an assignment. I know my son's middle school teachers had a rubric for every written assignment and this was one of the areas scored, no matter what the subject was.
I do have to defend "natural writing" or what we call "creative spelling" when kids are very young(4-6 years old). It helps them get their words on paper without asking how every word is spelled. I have kids from PreK-K and in the second quarter of K, we start to correct spelling of words they should have learned, like the, my, mother, etc. Each quarter, more words are corrected, as they get used to writing more.
I was allowed to pick my son's teachers in K-8. I picked his preK/K teacher and his 1st-3rd grade teacher. I messed up pretty big on that last one, as the teacher considered the "best" teacher by others may not be the best fit fir every child. Thank goodness, the intern took some of the kids the next year, and he was a good fit. After that, I let the teacher pick the next class for my son. They knew my son's school personality and the teacher's personality better than me. He is in high school, and although I have requested he not have a teacher again after a year of misery, I haven't requested a specific teacher again.
I do have to defend "natural writing" or what we call "creative spelling" when kids are very young(4-6 years old). It helps them get their words on paper without asking how every word is spelled. I have kids from PreK-K and in the second quarter of K, we start to correct spelling of words they should have learned, like the, my, mother, etc. Each quarter, more words are corrected, as they get used to writing more.
I was allowed to pick my son's teachers in K-8. I picked his preK/K teacher and his 1st-3rd grade teacher. I messed up pretty big on that last one, as the teacher considered the "best" teacher by others may not be the best fit fir every child. Thank goodness, the intern took some of the kids the next year, and he was a good fit. After that, I let the teacher pick the next class for my son. They knew my son's school personality and the teacher's personality better than me. He is in high school, and although I have requested he not have a teacher again after a year of misery, I haven't requested a specific teacher again.
. The teacher is right.

