Hero photograph
 
Photo by Gerhard Potgieter

School reports part 1

WPS —

Explaining how our reports work and what the different parts of them mean.

At the end of this term, you will be receiving your child's school report. This is shared through Hero.

In this newsletter and the next, we will endeavor to explain what some of the components of the report mean.

You will see that the report has seven main parts: (We will explain 5 of the parts today and the rest in the next newsletter)

Part 1. It is broken into Reading, Writing, Maths (Numicon), a general comment and attendance

Part 2. Under Reading, Writing and Maths there are:

Radial dials (referring to the green and blue circles on the photo below). These refer to how much for each curriculum level has been completed by your child. Please see the second photo (the one that looks like a graph) that comes from the NZ Curriculum which provides you with a guide of how many curriculum levels your child should be achieving per years at school. A general guide in NZ is two years at school per one curriculum level.

Image by: Gerhard Potgieter


Image by: Gerhard Potgieter

Part 3 and 4: Also, under Reading, Writing and Maths, you will see the current goals that your child is working on as well as you have the opportunity to click on and see the recently completed goals. This provides you with a chance to see what knowledge your child is currently trying to develop and what they have worked on in the past. See the photo below.

Image by: Gerhard Potgieter

Part 5: Progress statement for Reading, Writing and Maths - under each, you will see that there is a statement on what the expectation for your child is depending on their year level and a statement where your child is currently achieving. Please note that each child learns at different rates and that this is a guide against the above graph. This is also something that you can discuss with your child's teacher at the parent - teacher meeting which will be held at the beginning of Term 3.

We will explain part 6 and 7 to you in the next newsletter. However, please feel free to discuss this further with your child's teacher if there is something that you need more clarification. It is important that you grasp the function and meaning of each part of the report.