I'm at a crossroads here with my daughter.
We are currently in the public school system. My son (5th grade) is in middle school and is having a fabulous, fabulous year after 3 lousy years. I worried obsessively about him before school started and now *knock on wood* don't really worry anymore at all...he's doing great.
Alex is in 1st grade and has gone from struggling at first because he was behind with reading to catching up completely...He's social, happy and his teacher thinks he's doing well. The only worry that i had with him was his interest in playing gamecube over reading...but I bought him a leapster and put away the gamecube and voila...problem solved.
So...here is my problem:
My daughter (4th grade) is really...really struggling. In a conference a couple of weeks ago, the teacher basically confirmed what I already know. Amanda is a very visual learner. They took a science test on some physics stuff that they learned in class by using lego blocks as models and Amanda got an A. She knew exactly what she was doing. The next two chapters though were not hands on...they were read it/hear about it/memorize it...and she bombed getting a *gulp* C and a D. *gulp gulp*.
Basically, the teacher told me that Amanda totally zones out when she is read to or lectured to in class.....and excels when they do manipulatives in math or do projects which involve doing artwork or using clay models etc to show things. She also has excellent reading comprehension scores for when she reads on her own....it's just the listening when read to that is a problem. The teacher has also already hinted about some ADD diagnosis without the 'hyperactivity'.
The problem, of course, is that standard educational practices from here on out do not encourage really a hands on approach. Not only that, they don't seem to encourage much academic creativity at all. Amanda is an avid writer...Every day after school, she writes for at least an hour...if not several. Her room is full of her 'books'...some of them good...some of them...not-so-good. Her teacher is very critical of her writing because she doesn't write the way she would like her to.
They have to journal about their day every day, for example. The teacher wants them to write about what they learned that day. Amanda journals 2-5 pages every day about what she was wearing, what the teacher was wearing, how the room smelled, who had gas, what they had for lunch, and..oh yah, they read Shiloh in language arts. She fills it with drawings too. I think it's creative...the teacher thinks that she rambles on and on.
But...I digress and have just rambled on myself...
I don't think Amanda can be successful in the traditional classroom setting right now. I asked her teacher to provide me a breakdown of the units they are working on and learning objectives for each so that we could put something together at home to supplement Amanda nad she told me she couldn't give me that.
I'm left pondering the Montessori charter school again. I got a call a few weeks ago that they had openings......It's a 45 minute drive one way....I'm seriously considering calling Monday to find out if the still have an opening for her and then going there with her to visit it...and maybe pulling her out of the school and driving her daily.
Thomas is totally opposed....so...but at this point, I don't care...I'm happy to do it behind his back . I feel like he is completely out-of-touch with the kid's school stuff. Example: Alex and Amanda forgot their lunch one day last week. He brought the lunches to the office on his way to work and didn't know their teacher's names The secretary had to look it up for him.
What do you guys think? 45 minutes one way is a heck of a lot of time on the roads every day....it just may be too much...but I just don't know what else to do to help my child......maybe Montessori wouldn't even be a good fit for her either???
I'll accept whatever you guys tell me.....just not my dh :>
We are currently in the public school system. My son (5th grade) is in middle school and is having a fabulous, fabulous year after 3 lousy years. I worried obsessively about him before school started and now *knock on wood* don't really worry anymore at all...he's doing great.
Alex is in 1st grade and has gone from struggling at first because he was behind with reading to catching up completely...He's social, happy and his teacher thinks he's doing well. The only worry that i had with him was his interest in playing gamecube over reading...but I bought him a leapster and put away the gamecube and voila...problem solved.
So...here is my problem:
My daughter (4th grade) is really...really struggling. In a conference a couple of weeks ago, the teacher basically confirmed what I already know. Amanda is a very visual learner. They took a science test on some physics stuff that they learned in class by using lego blocks as models and Amanda got an A. She knew exactly what she was doing. The next two chapters though were not hands on...they were read it/hear about it/memorize it...and she bombed getting a *gulp* C and a D. *gulp gulp*.
Basically, the teacher told me that Amanda totally zones out when she is read to or lectured to in class.....and excels when they do manipulatives in math or do projects which involve doing artwork or using clay models etc to show things. She also has excellent reading comprehension scores for when she reads on her own....it's just the listening when read to that is a problem. The teacher has also already hinted about some ADD diagnosis without the 'hyperactivity'.
The problem, of course, is that standard educational practices from here on out do not encourage really a hands on approach. Not only that, they don't seem to encourage much academic creativity at all. Amanda is an avid writer...Every day after school, she writes for at least an hour...if not several. Her room is full of her 'books'...some of them good...some of them...not-so-good. Her teacher is very critical of her writing because she doesn't write the way she would like her to.
They have to journal about their day every day, for example. The teacher wants them to write about what they learned that day. Amanda journals 2-5 pages every day about what she was wearing, what the teacher was wearing, how the room smelled, who had gas, what they had for lunch, and..oh yah, they read Shiloh in language arts. She fills it with drawings too. I think it's creative...the teacher thinks that she rambles on and on.
But...I digress and have just rambled on myself...
I don't think Amanda can be successful in the traditional classroom setting right now. I asked her teacher to provide me a breakdown of the units they are working on and learning objectives for each so that we could put something together at home to supplement Amanda nad she told me she couldn't give me that.
I'm left pondering the Montessori charter school again. I got a call a few weeks ago that they had openings......It's a 45 minute drive one way....I'm seriously considering calling Monday to find out if the still have an opening for her and then going there with her to visit it...and maybe pulling her out of the school and driving her daily.
Thomas is totally opposed....so...but at this point, I don't care...I'm happy to do it behind his back . I feel like he is completely out-of-touch with the kid's school stuff. Example: Alex and Amanda forgot their lunch one day last week. He brought the lunches to the office on his way to work and didn't know their teacher's names The secretary had to look it up for him.
What do you guys think? 45 minutes one way is a heck of a lot of time on the roads every day....it just may be too much...but I just don't know what else to do to help my child......maybe Montessori wouldn't even be a good fit for her either???
I'll accept whatever you guys tell me.....just not my dh :>
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