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    Joined: Mar 2017
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    I can see this both ways, the student should show that they have mastered the foundation concepts before they move on to the next. However, with these kiddos they learn so quickly that they should be accelerated to their level, but when the teachers are not differentiating their schoolwork, there is no one teaching them those concepts which make it difficult for them to get a 95%. I find for my own kids that I think I am teaching them the advanced math concepts, but there are holes of the concepts that I don't think to teach them. Your son should not have to sit through math that he already knows most of, but he also needs his teachers to teach him those "holes" that no one has taught him before.

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    We finally met with the school regarding DS's math acceleration. After seeing 100% on the end of 4th gr. test they unanimously agreed to a single subject acceleration next year. This is a good start, I guess. We can always do another acceleration after next year.

    We were hoping and in fact asked that with such a high score that they would test with end of 5th year test, as we are sure he would've scored nearly as well. At our meeting they acknowledged that he was a very good "multiple choice" test taker but said that they did not have any tests they would feel comfortable using. ???

    They seemed really concerned that in 5th grade there is a lot more writing and explaining your work and that multiple choice tests were not the best tool to evaluate this aspect.

    it should be noted that 5th grade is in same school but 6th grade is about 10 minutes away and would involve much more logistics (although this seems inevitable next year)

    We said that we just wanted to know where his zone of proximal development actually was and that with a 100% on his testing he clearly hit the ceiling. Wouldn't it be good to do some above grade level testing to find out where he is at?

    The administrator said that they would try to find something that would be appropriate over the summer and we would revisit this in the fall.

    So my question is, does anybody know a test that they might be able to use? something that would give them a good idea of his actual level of achievement.

    We just want the school to be aware of his level of achievement by a measure they would trust. To this point they have not seemed overly anxious to find this out...



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    Our district pre and post tests each grade's math with tests right from the textbook company (curriculum based assessment) which might include a few explain your answers.

    Sometimes it is the exact same test, sometimes there are form A and form b tests.(same skills tested, different numbers in the problems).

    Last edited by Cookie; 07/03/17 10:36 AM.
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    Generally speaking, the most direct measure of preparation for SSA is performance on the end-of-course or end-of-grade test from the specific curriculum used by the district. If there is no year-long summative measure (which is not unusual for elementary texts), one could also administer all of the unit tests for that grade, which takes a little more time, but also has the advantage of pinpointing the exact gaps that exist, if there are any. Ideally, one would use this kind of data to inform curriculum compacting for a student who scored well, but did not make the 95% benchmark (although 80 is probably a fairer measure, since most schools consider 70% to be mastery of the standards for NT students). Meeting the benchmark for mastery should mean moving on to the next level for instruction.

    Another (much more laborious) option, depending on the state, is to have the student take a previous year's version of the state-wide test in that content area for the relevant grade to be skipped. (In some states, these are released one to two years later.) If the raw score received is at or above the level considered proficient/meets expectations for that particular administration, then they should be able to move to the next grade-level for instruction. Repeat until they no longer score in the "meets expectations" or above range.

    "Should" being the operative word, of course.


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