coughillegalimmigrantscough |
And so does fcps. Our level three and advanced math combination are very good for kids like my bright non center kid. I can't help but think how nasty, insulting and disparaging these kinds of anti AAP threads are towards the many amazing base schools and non AAP teachers and the birght or even average kids throughout fcps. |
+10000 Some of the posters here appear to insinuate anyone not in Level IV AAP is an illegal immigrant in MS-13 and unable to read or write. |
Absolutely. One (of many) issues with AAP is that all of the kids now in it are somehow under the mistaken impression that they are the cream of the crop, smarter than all others. FCPS has done a huge disservice to all kids by dividing them up in this way. |
+1 The people defending AAP as it now stands know that if it returned to a more selective, true gifted program, their kids would most likely not make the cut. And as you said, nor would the vast majority of kids. Gifted kids are not a dime a dozen, in FCPS or in the world at large. |
Your comment doesn't make sense. The "anti-AAP" posters (or at least those of us advocating downsizing AAP) are saying that it's exactly because there are so many bright, non-AAP kids that AAP need not segregate them into two very similar groups. The point many of us are trying to make is that most kids are perfectly able to do AAP work. Instead, we're advocating for a far smaller and more selective program, only for the very highly gifted, with all other kids in General Ed. And with a major revamping of the Gen Ed curriculum too. How is that "insulting and disparaging" the non-AAP kids? My own child is a very bright, General Ed student who is perfectly capable of doing AAP work. |
As they expand the program it gets easier and easier. Gen Ed at FCPS is just a joke, although there are a few good teachers. -- signed also mother of 2 in AAP |
+100000 We were so happy to leave the base school and my 7 year old's job behind. |
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The committed parents work with any size AAP or none at all. They humbly acknowledge that their kids are like many other gifted kids, but need to be prepped and trained to their full potential. If the AAP capacity is limited, then the bragging parents who self-label their child as gifted will whine about the competition from the other better gifted kids who enter with solid scores.
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According to the link, it is the advanced and average students who need tutors to keep up. |
Given the demographics and competitiveness of that area, more likely it's kids using tutors as enrichment, not remediation to keep up. |
I don't think people think that, but either way, this group of super gifted children is not what this thread is about. The focus is on the kids who are in the gifted program, but don't need to be there. Not how gifted is FCPS's gifted program. Start another thread for that if you want. |
I think "how gifted" FCPS's program is and discussing kids who "don't need to be there" are related. The fact it is so large means that it captures kids who truly, at the end of the day, are bright but not gifted. I contend that if FCPS parents want to claim it's one of the best school districts in the state, or country, that logically has to encompass a wider base than just the AAP centers. It's ridiculous that people are asserting that their run-of-the-mill bright children are incapable of being educated in the mainstream. |
So now we are back to vacationing in Rimini vs. Sorrento again. |
What do you mean Montgomery County doesn't teach advanced math in General Ed? Any student has the option of starting advanced math at the Compacted 4/5 level without regard to entry into HGC (highly gifted center). |