No. Sometimes this will be virtually impossible. Its important to remember that the class the child is in will have work set that the government sees an average. In other words, what the majority of children should know and learn. However, for a child with special needs, the teacher will adapt the curriculum and teaching method to suit the child. Therefore, if you have a child with a mild learning disability such as dyslexia, resources and things will be put into place to help the child keep up and maintain work levels. However, if you have a child with severe autism and therefore poor communication and poor working memory skills, the child is less likely to retain information, and the teacher will work towards helping that child to get the best grades they can achieve. And this is always taken into consideration when the child is due to move up a class/leave school for high school. Each child's learning threshold and achievements are taken on individual merits.
Yes it is a grade level.
First grade typically corresponds to Level 16 in primary education systems that use leveling.
The grade level at which a child starts writing long reports depends on the ability of the child. Advanced children will learn to write long reports sooner than those that are of average or below average grade levels. The first book report one might recall writing would be about the fifth grade.
No. Bella is homeschooled and she is reading and writing a year above her grade level.
a grade 5 is a hard level
Sara Plain and Tall is grade level 4.2. Journey is 4.8. Grandfather's Dance is 2.4. Fly Away is 3.2. Cassy Binnegar is 5.9.
It means that you are grade level c witch is 3rd grade
It does not gain any more EXP points and has max happiness unless it was caught at level 100. Nothing special.
About grade 3.
no its 6th grade level
Ready Level E is typically designed for students in 4th grade. It focuses on developing reading comprehension and vocabulary skills at that grade level.
Probably not. I don't think that any slave would be allowed to be educated past a third grade level.