From Pre-K through 12th grade, in plain language. Pick a grade to see standards, materials, and assessments — what your student should know, what they're using, and how we measure progress.
This is the intro paragraph that runs above the K-12 timeline. The timeline itself reads from a separate Sheet — see docs/academics-spec.md for the Sheet schema.
ISR is 5 minutes — Doc edits propagate within that window.
Montesano students move through three buildings on their way from preschool to graduation: Beacon Elementary for PreK–2, Simpson Elementary for grades 3–6, and Monte Jr./Sr. High for grades 7–12.
The page below shows what students learn at each grade — the plain-language version, written for families. Pick a grade from the row of tiles to see the standards, materials, and assessments that grade.
Each grade panel has three things:
Montesano follows the Washington State Learning Standards — the same standards every public school in the state uses. The Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) sets these for English language arts, math, science, social studies, the arts, health, and world languages.
Where you see "What students learn" on this page, we're translating those formal standards into language you can use to talk with your child about school. If you want the formal version, OSPI publishes the full standards on their website at ospi.k12.wa.us/student-success/learning-standards-instructional-materials.
Our teachers work from a shared instructional framework that emphasizes clear learning targets, evidence-based teaching, and regular check-ins on student progress. Curriculum, standards alignment, and the framework itself are reviewed each year by the Teaching & Learning office in partnership with department leads at each building.
For curriculum questions, contact Stephanie Klinger, Director of CTE, Curriculum, and HR, at the District Office: 502 E. Spruce Avenue, (360) 249-3942.
For day-to-day classroom questions, your child's teacher is the right first stop. Each school's family handbook explains how teachers prefer to communicate.
6 subject areas · what your student learns this year
Decode short-vowel and basic consonant patterns; read grade-level texts with growing fluency; know about 100 sight words; capitalize sentence beginnings and proper nouns; write a complete sentence; write a short opinion or narrative piece with a beginning, middle, and end.
Coming soon...
Universal screener (district-adopted); classroom diagnostics
Add and subtract within 20 (memorizing facts within 10); count and compare numbers to 120; understand place value (tens and ones); tell time to the hour and half hour; measure with non-standard units; understand halves and fourths.
Coming soon...
Universal screener (district-adopted); classroom diagnostics
Light and sound (how we see and hear); patterns in the sky (sun, moon, stars across the year); life cycles of plants and animals; how parents and offspring resemble each other.
Coming soon...
Universal screener (district-adopted); classroom diagnostics
Past, present, and future; community helpers; families and traditions across time; reading a simple globe and US map.
Coming soon...
Universal screener (district-adopted); classroom diagnostics
Identify lines, shapes, and warm/cool colors in art; sing in tune in a group; create simple rhythm patterns; act out short stories.
Coming soon...
Universal screener (district-adopted); classroom diagnostics
Refine locomotor skills; throw, catch, and kick at developmental level; cooperate in small groups; identify body systems at the introduction level (heart, lungs, muscles); good food choices and physical activity.
Coming soon...
Universal screener (district-adopted); classroom diagnostics