Monday, December 16, 2013

ESL - ya, technically...

If you are a fellow adoptive parent of a child born in another country,
and
if you are not big on the schools doing whatever they like with your child,
and
in case you skip reading the rest of this post because it's so long…
      just read the first paragraph here  |  
                                                        V
                                                        V

The "Home Language Survey" we filled out for kindergarten is apparently sent directly to our school district, and if it indicates any other language in the home other than English the child is automatically tested. According to U.S. federal law, the parents do not need to be notified nor do they need to give consent for this initial assessment.  Our school district here in Colorado chooses to not notify nor get consent of parents.

I'm not sure about your school district, but you might want to check.
We put "Mandarin" on the form somewhere, so D was automatically tested.
I think if D had scored a little higher, we never would have even known he was tested...

Now that we know about it, we can choose to refuse any further ESL services.

The test they administered first is a shorter quick screening/assessment based on the WIDA-Access test. They tried to make it sound ok since all the kids who are flagged on the Home Language Survey are automatically subject to this assessment.

A random stranger-person from the district came at some point and pulled David out of the class and gave him this listening-speaking assessment, which included listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills assessment. (Was this one of the days he came home and had one of his old tantrums? We don't know…) I think the classroom teacher filled out some kind of form for the district with her observations as well.

Here's how we found out:

We received in D's backpack a letter stating that - good news! - he qualified for ESL services and they had already made the decision to monitor our son in the classroom, with the ESL teacher and the K teacher collaborating. This letter had no information on any additional testing that would be done. We were quite pissed off surprised, you could say. We requested a meeting with the ESL teacher. When we met with her, she also had invited the classroom teacher. The ESL teacher could not find the exact date when the assessment was given to David, and the kindergarten teacher had no idea that David was even pulled by a district person and assessed.

What, she has no recollection of your child leaving the classroom? you say. Yep that's right. Not the first time a child has been out of her class & she didn't know it either.

The full WIDA-Access test is given to the kids who score below a threshold number. It is given sometime between Jan 6 and Feb 7. We can refuse the test, but we need special permission from the elementary school principal. (??? Us refusing not good enough???) Jason wants David to have the test. We asked to be notified so we could talk to him about it ahead of time and ACTUALLY prepare him this time around. The ESL teacher said she will be administering this test to all kindergarteners at this school, so at least she will be a familiar face I suppose. She took a 1-day class on how to administer the test on December 10.

I made sure the ESL teacher and the K teacher heard me say that we have concerns that David may have an auditory processing disorder that affects his learning and could affect his testing on a speaking and listening test, as well as some difficulties recalling words and this changes day by day for him. The K teacher showed us a few of David's recent paper worksheet tests and told us how well he is doing academically.

But she didn't even notice that our kid was pulled from her class by a non-school employee so... does she notice if David is using his amazing compensatory strategies to function within the classroom when he doesn't understand? Huh, good question… We can get the score of the test when they have it. I think she said the scores should come back in May...?? and we can give those to our SLP in case that information would help.

I don't believe test scores tell you squat.
Especially when you have listening and speaking issues and these are the skills that the "test" is based on.


Kindergarten = "children's garden"  which evokes an image of carefree children running and playing and actively learning and growing.

Dude, what's up with all the worksheets?

Still praying we can bring D home for his education.
Praying, praying, praying...
(((hugs))),
chris

So do not throw away this confident trust in the Lord. Remember the great reward it brings you! Patient endurance is what you need now, so that you will continue to do God’s will. Then you will receive all that he has promised.
              Hebrews 10:35-36

Friday, December 6, 2013

Day Number 80 in Homeschool-Land

I'm feeling the need to document some homeschool info...

We currently homeschool our 3rd grader after having him in a district preschool one year, a private preschool for one year, and a public charter school for 3 years. The decision to pull him has been a mega-humongous gift to him and to our family.

Our 3rd grader's requests before we started homeschooling were 1) history, and 2) a white board.
No problemo.

We are using the following for our curriculum:
  Sonlight Core B+C (World History)
  Sonlight Language Arts with grade 4-5 readers
  Spelling Power
  Handwriting Skills Simplified- Cursive Writing Grade 3
  Teaching Textbooks Math 4
  Life of Fred math supplement
  A hodgepodge eclectic mix of science topics and experiments
  Critical Thinking Co logic & sentence fragments & word roots workbooks

We tried the following and stopped using them:
  Sonlight LA - grade 3 (Sonlight was AWESOME and did the exchange with no problems)
  Sonlight Science B (we may still use some of this in our eclectic-ness)
  Saxon Math 5/4

"Extracurricular activities" include Cub Scouts, and piano lessons starting next week. If I could have all the kids at home for school, we could do some volunteering... Meals-on-Wheels again maybe? Josh liked that when he was in preschool.

And we do have a white board.

We have been experimenting with a 5-week-on / 1-week-off schedule for our school. So far we both love it ~ the weeks off give both of us a break and give me time to plan for the next 5 weeks which has been taking me maybe 5 hours or so. It's hard to know since I end up getting sucked into the Pinterest vortex which ends up being quite delightful I must say :) . One hour or so per week of planning isn't bad at all! I also have time to get projects done, such as painting several rooms in our house and canning. I keep holding my breath because we will still have school when his buddies are done... We may regret this schedule during the first two weeks in June! The relaxed schedule has made it healthier for Josh (and for me) to get out of the school schedule routine and to relax and just enjoy learning.

  • Side note: I can't wait to get #2 home to school him. He appears to be excelling at school, but I think he has amazing compensatory strategies and frankly he's fooling some people who aren't paying attention like they should be... I guess I'm just not sure what reading and math he is actually learning/retaining. I feel like at some point he will hit a wall if he doesn't learn the way that's best for him. At home his academics are inconsistent. With his auditory processing issues (APD), he really needs a multisensory approach to learn best, and I hear that most of the work his KINDERGARTEN class does is worksheets while sitting in their seats. NOTE TO THE SCHOOL: That's not how God designed little kids. I will be posting about our "ESL experience" soon. I found a great reading program for APD that I was keeping in mind until #2 came home for school. While talking with our most excellent speech pathologist the other day, she said the program I had in mind was the one the language specialist was thinking of for David! I also have a multi-sensory math curriculum in mind too for David. Someday... someday.

Now we are in December and we paused our formal homeschool curriculum and are doing a Christmas unit study. This is my first unit study and it has shifted and changed course each day during this first week. Good thing I am ok being flexible with our plans! I suspect next week will be much the same. We have covered geography, history, language arts, math, and science topics so I think we are doing a-OK!

After yet another break for Christmas (yep we take lots o' breaks) we will get back to our regular curriculum that I have listed up top.

I joke with friends about how we have an every-other-week-off schedule in our homeschool :) Nah, it's not that bad. I do notice that we have more time for learning even outside of "school hours" with our family school lifestyle. And that we are having more fun.

Now for the fun part:

Our new-to-us piano
Ya we're working on getting a bench :)

field trip!

Josh maneuvering our "laser beam" field

field trip! wall-to-wall trampolines!

homemade geodes

OK, not exactly homeschool.
We did have a parent-teacher conference in Hawaii. Complete with mai tais :)

Stalagmite
nature walk

Sam in his helmet and boots

cooking class

Chinese kid holding a Chinese watercolor painting
Field trip to a kids' play - these kids are friends in our homeschool group 
Nose art courtesy of a SPECTACULAR dismount from his scooter

(((hugs))),
chris

Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need.
       Matthew 6:33