Michelle Reid should rethink this whole program. |
Don't worry, she hates it and is working hard to dismantle it. She's from the Pacific Northwest. Garza was from Texas and supported the AAP program. She supported a academic excellence. That is no longer the goal of public education. |
Everyone complaining about how AAP is implemented should remember that there are VDOE requirements for how gifted education works. Yes they can make a lot of changes (APS is totally different, for example, and LCPS is much more restrictive), but things like multiple pathways for referral other than testing are required by the state of Virginia. |
That's the point though - it could be implemented differently/better. It doesn't have to be an all or none conversation, but a question of whether the specific way it's implemented in Fairfax county is the best approach. |
The majority get in through test scores and are smarter but the parent referrals and principal picks invites helicopter parents and teacher's pets into the program and these are the elements of the program most likely to have kids that feel like they are better than others. It's ironic that the kids who act like they are better are the ones that didn't get in because they were better. The really smart kids either have an attitude well before AAP or don't. They didn't need AAP to tell them they were smart. |
This is probably not true. There may be a handful of kids like that in the entire county unless you are talking about athletic recruits. |
Depends so much on the center. I have a truly gifted kid and our center had quite a few truly gifted kids so it was a great cohort. In fact, my son really did not have good friends until 3rd grade. Personally, I think reverting back to the old GT system would be the best thing to do. Give these truly gifted kids an appropriate cohort, but make it small enough that it is not upsetting (less upsetting?) to the kids and parents who are not in it. |
I get it, the world seems scarier and more complex than it was when we were kids. It seems like intelligence, maybe even hyper-intelligence is a pre-requisite to any sort of success. It's not necessary OR sufficient for success, but everyone seems to think that way. AAP just accelerates your kid by a year, maybe two. And frankly math is the only AAP subject that makes any real difference by the time they get into middle school, so in my mind advanced math is every bit as useful as AAP. AAP history is maybe 12 extra worksheets through the year, it's nice but I'd rather have them touch grass. If you are stressed about your kid not making AAP, see if they qualify for advanced math. If not, then let them enjoy their childhood while getting good grades. Teach them resilience, independence and character. They will get far more mileage out of those traits than an extra year or two of math. I'm not saying that smart kids can't have character. |
The bolded is about who you surround yourself with, not about reality. And this thread is about people being hurt that their kids were not labeled "smart" by the system and peers, even when their kids were very clearly intelligent and high achievers. -TJ graduate and AAP parent |
PP, I'll tell you. In an elementary school of, practically, all high achieving students -- those high achievers are divided into two groups. "You are the smart ones" and "you are not." That is the message |
The problem is that this is no longer necessarily true. The AAP equity report showed that GBRS was 4 times more important than test scores for AAP selection. This also meshes with my experience, where quite a lot of kids with CogAT scores in the 120s but high GBRS got in. Several of these kids were not even in the LII math pullout or highest reading group with my DD, who got rejected with much higher scores. I agree on the second point. The most obnoxious child and parent were from a girl who prepped like crazy for CogAT, still got only a 120, but was a massive teacher's pet. The mom was a frequent classroom volunteer, and the girl was one of those who had the super expensive, cute matchy clothes. The child bullied mine for "not being smart," and the mom went on at great length about how her child wasn't a good test taker, but the AAP committee really saw through that and realized that her daughter was gifted and special. ![]() |
I think your example actually proved that referrals and invites bringing in teacher's pets are the kids who are likely to bully others. Those kids learn it at home from the moms who are likely to go on at length about their kid's intelligence. |
People move from Arlington and LCPS to Fairfax for AAP because their programs are poorly run. I am not a fan of the Centers, I don't really see the need but I am at a school that is more middle class/upper middle class so there is less urgency to build a cohort because more kids are starting school ready or a bit ahead. I can see the desire for Center schools for families in Title 1 and near Title 1 schools. I don't understand it in other schools. If we do have Centers, they should be treated like language immersion and magnet schools and parents shoudl provide transportation. The exception would be at Title 1 and near Title 1 schools where families receiving FARMs would be provided transportation. I do believe that there is teasing/bulling/unkind comments made by kids in AAP to kids not in AAP. But I heard those comments as a kid lagging behind in ES in the 1980's. Kids are kids and they do pick on other kids, they do use perceived weakness to hurt kids. My nickname was "LD" for a bit. I am in my 50's, I earned a PhD, I have a great job and I can remember the hurt from ES. It happens. It is real. I fully believe that there are kids who weaponize their AAP status against other kids. That said, it would happen without AAP. Kids know who is ahead and who is behind. They know the smart kids and the dumb kids and the hyper kids and the words are said. I corrected a kid in my car who told another kid that no one likes him. I have corrected kids on fields trips and outings for using unkind words, back in kindergarten and still in 6th grade. AAP is not the cause of this, it is just the FCPS vehicle for the same crap kids have dealt with for ages. Parents need to not hype up that this program is special and that program is lesser. The kids are partially picking up on the vibe from their parents. If you are frantic about your kid getting into AAP, then your kids are going to get that this is really important and that will carry over into how they interact with other kids. We choose not to attend the Center school because it has a reputation for being socially a dead zone. The kids at the school don't accept invitations to birthday parties or to hang out. That is an important part of school to us. |
Your daughter's bullies are leaving the school? I see that as an absolute win. |
lol what is a truly gifted kid |