WOW. You inferred all of that from someone asking when the scores might come in the mail. You are completely off your rocker. |
What resource? it's $400+ for WISC, and individuals are paying that. Why are you full of anger?? You just do what's best for your kid as best as you can. Others do the same. That's all. |
I hope you brought a really big bowl and are willing to share! |
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These comments are so silly. I think it's great that people are interested in their children's education and want whatever is best for them. I am looking forward to getting the scores myself.
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| I will go one step further. Yes, I want my snowflake in AAP. Badly. I will spend the bucks on WISC, endure the headaches of compiling outstanding work samples, and will grovel for letters of recommendation. I will do whatever I can to get him into the program (my daughter is in, via appeal, and here comes your favorite phrase for ridicule, she's thriving). Why do I want this so bad? Because hands down, it's a better education, with a more disciplined set of peers. If my desire to do this for my child ticks you off, then eff you. Come on, make my day, and rage on about how my child will water down the program for your profoundly gifted precious. |
Yea some small number of people like 07:10 is really obsessed with this. |
Work samples and letters of recommendation don't matter. Don't waste time on those. It's all numbers game. NNAT, CogAT, GBRS, WISC. I'm not wasting my time on those this year. |
What part of the country is that? Question: Will you accept the test results as is? If your snowflake just misses the cut, will that be the end of it for you? Because, you know, if you're not intense, I imagine you'll just accept it. Right? |
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PP: I would not accept the test results. The test results are a group administered test and are a snapshot of my child on that day. A lot of things can impact the test...a storm the night before, a cold, dog barking, fight with friend. The thin about 6 and 7 yo's is a lot of things can reduce ability on a given day.
Now, if the WISC is consistent, that is another story. In the WISC, the tester should note the condition of the child during the test. |
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It's the COUNTY, not the country. Yes, the southern/eastern part of Fairfax County does seem less intense to me than the western side.
Yes, I do intend to accept the scores. I am not SO convinced that my child has unique needs or that our local school is insufficient for my kids. I'm o.k. with that and it makes my life easier to have two kids at the same school rather than two different schools. So, let's see where the chip fall and go from there. But, I do not begrudge anyone whose child's score is slightly lower than the cutoff doing what they need to do to give their child a shot at an AAP center. I'm sure there are kids who can do quite well in AAP, but their scores are slightly lower. Do what works for you and your child (through the approved channels, including an appeal), but in the end, accept the outcome and make the best of your local school or your AAP center. Regular kids are great too! |
I do bregrudge them. Don't worry about my kids. They tested off the charts. |
There is not cutoff scores. Only cutoff for pool. Based on the statistics, there are kids with scores under 115 in AAP. |
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16:39, you need to begrudge the County, not other parents. If the test scores were a perfect, infallible measure of which kids belonged in AAP, there would be no screening files, no GBRS, no screening committee, much less an appeals process.
P.S. You sound like a total bitch. |
| Pass the popcorn, we have two live ones. |
Uh.. everybody accepts the test results (NNAT, CogAT, WISC) and AAP decision. |