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As others said it’s a central review. There is nothing parents or students need to do at this time. This is merely a notification and providing info.
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/curriculum/specialprograms/elementary/center-enriched-studies/ |
| Thanks for the criteria. My 3rd grader took MAP-R today. His fall MAP-R in fall was 95% and he is ON grade level with all As. So I guess that means he’ll most likely meet these criteria. Then it’s up to the central office to decide if he gets a CES spot? I’m not sure I’d send him anyway since it’s kind of far from our house. |
Apologies. The grade criteria reported should have been an A in Reading AND an A in either Writing OR Social Studies. For the poster, above, who asked where this comes from: CES FAQ -- https://docs.google.com/document/d/127SBBarwO1ox4Soalug9dg3HdIe7f5UNqFB0NHIyQ88 MCPS report to the BOE -- https://www2.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/siteassets/district/boe/meetings/memorandum/09/uploadedfiles/boe/meetings/memorandum/230119-ap-capstone-magnet-prog-12-06-2022-01-c-d-e-bd.pdf This is from last year and will be updated for this year, but he criteria are unlikely to change until the planned review this spring on criteria-based programs that OSA proposed to the BOE just as this school year was starting. Related to that 504 and hitting the mark, be careful about assumptions of the locally normed percentiles for your school's FARMS-rate tranche. Though it's based on the reported RIT score, it's not the same as the national percentile shown on the MAP report -- see the methodology, above. As far as having others think your child got a break that theirs didn't, I hope that they are viewed for their own worth and not for a number. I hope that others can consider the adversities that the "receiving services" moniker is supposed to represent, even if the associated adjustment is something of a hammer instead of a scalpel, and don't assume that that's necessarily what got anyone in. I certainly hope nobody puts you in a position of having to defend your child's abilities. |
It depends on what your locally normed MAP score ends up being. In years past, kids at the lowest FARMS schools with scores in the mid 90s did NOT qualify for the lottery pool because a 94, 95 etc. % in their cohort group was not top 85%. |
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They recently expanded ELC to all schools and I believe some of them are teaching it as the only literacy curriculum (for the entire grade).
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I agree, we are at a low FARMs school and both my kids were all As, above grade level reading, mid 90s reading map. Neither was identified for CES. Both did ELC at school. |
Yes - consistent with the “honors for all” approach that MCPS is doing for high school. |
| Is the criteria for CES the same as for ELC or can you qualify for ELC but not be placed in the lottery? |
I think it's because MCPS is still clinging to Benchmark as the primary curriculum and schools are taking it upon themselves to provide something better. |
My DS is in a CES program. They said at orientation that the curriculum is geared for kids testing in the 97% or higher. That's not the same as being the cutoff, but they did say anyone not reading at that level would struggle. |
It’s the same. If your dc doesn’t qualify for the CES pool they don’t qualify for ELC. But schools have worked to get kids on the cusp into the elc program if they miss by a small margin |
Hopefully most of the kids in those schools really need ELC or they are somehow differentiating the classes. Otherwise that’s a waste for the advance students or more work for the teacher who will still need to create depth and advancement for some students. And I say that after having talked to an ELC teacher and a Reading Specialist. |
I'd seen this about the two-way immersion programs but not the one-way programs. Got a reference on it? |
We are at a mid-farms school, not one known for being amazing. Both my kids score consistently above the 99th percentile for both sets of MAP testing and their teachers tell me they have several other students who are roughly equivalent each year. I don’t totally understand how it’s possible but apparently there are lots of super high scoring kids at our totally random elementary school. I hope that means they can have a good ELC experience even if they don’t get in to the lottery (we are not super inclined to send them to CES even if they get in). |
To be clear, the one-way immersion programs don't have ELC. But the gen-ed (English-only) programs at those schools do. |