#2 LOG? Like others have said, when I read Ruf I see level 3, maybe a tiny bit of 4. Most of the time he seems like a regular kid who is just regular smart and advanced verbally. He is not reading yet. 3+3= 6 does not indicate HG+ but I know that is probably what he would be asked to do a year from now if he were to go to public K. .
Hi EastnWest -
You gave me my laugh for the day. I'm a bit past the 'parenting a Kindergardener' stage, but I don't imagine that most Kindys are teaching 3+3=6. Maybe counting to 10? Most kindy kids don't really 'get' what numbers are - which is why it's so cool that your son used the idea of 'half' (a fraction) and 3+3 together with the play. I'm not saying he's HG+ based on that, but I can say, fairly confidently, that Gifted Denial is blocking you from seeing what 'Average' for age 4 and 5 are.
Your school district may have what it teachers in the various years posted on it's website under 'Scope and Sequence' - Or you can chat up a Mom with a child in Kindy and get a look at the worksheets that get sent home - Or you can check the workbooks sold in your local bookstore - Or you can request a trip into the classroom to observe the Kindy and 1st grade classes. I reccomend 'All of the Above' LOL!
As for LOG, I think that the idea of LOG is important, but knowing ones child's exact LOG from reading a book isn't easy. I wish that I had the book in front of me, but I think that she based the discriptions on 200 kids - which is wonderful - but very different than if she had had 2000 kids to base her lovely numbers on.
Personally - I think of kids as:
MG - moderatly gifted, likely to enjoy that 90 minute a week pull out program and 'ok' with that and an afterschool or saturday enrichment class.
HG - bored silly by the pull out if with agemates, likely to get perfectionistic or act out if not intellectually challenged on a daily basis.
PG - Just plain does stuff that mostly everyone recognises as 'weirdly smart' from an early age.
Smiles,
Grinty