| Especially this past year, there were a LOT of kids in-pool they were not accepted in round 1 at our center school. If you are seriously considering AAP for your child, I would prepare the packet and spend some time filling the questionnaire out. Under the new holistic approach, I don't know if "let the scores speak for themselves/it will look like a parent referred kid not in-pool kid" is a strong argument. |
| If your child took the WPPSI before entering K (part of full neuropsych), would you include that score in parent referral? This was the only testing we’ve done Outside of school. |
No, that was too long ago. |
WPPSI isn't on the list of tests accepted by the committee. This makes perfect sense, because tests taken as a preschooler are too unstable and not at all relevant to the academic needs of a 2nd grader. |
| If your child isn't accepted "in pool" do get a notice for that too or do they just send you the scores and that's all you hear? Thanks! |
I believe there are two letters. |
You only receive an in-pool letter if your child is in-pool. They don't send out "not-in-pool" letters. |
OP said she wanted to see if it was worth doing a packet. For a lot of people, it isn’t a matter of, oh my kid is in pool, I won’t bother, but more of the kid got a 105 on CogAT, it is highly, highly unlikely that kid will be admitted no matter how fabulous the packet, so why bother. |
I got an in pool letter but it was AFTER any supplemental info was due. |
That's a foolish approach, though. If your kid has a fabulous packet and low CogAT scores, you can always get a WISC and appeal. Sometimes, kids with high IQs test very poorly on CogAT or just didn't understand one of the sections. If you don't do the parent referral, there is no opportunity to appeal. Also, some kids are admitted with much lower scores than what people would imagine. They really are looking holistically at the packets. Even if your kid ends up with low scores and a meh packet, it doesn't hurt you to submit a referral anyway. At the very least, it will cause the local committee to think about your child and consider your child for Level III services, advanced math, and other things like that. |
This is not correct. The appeal has nothing to do with the original parent referral, you just need to submit the required materials for appeal and follow the deadline. |
PP is referring to children who are not in pool and are parent referred. If a child is not in pool and not parent referred, then the parents cannot appeal later. FCPS has a universal screening process for gifted students but not a universal admission process. I agree with that. Asking FCPS to create a packet for every single 2nd grader in FCPS is too burdensome and a poor use of resources. |
This. If you're not in pool and don't do a parent referral, they won't make a packet for your child. Your child then won't be screened by the central committee, so there won't be any decision to appeal. If you want to leave the door open for a WISC and appeal, you have to do whatever is needed for your child to be screened in the first place. |
Pretty sure it did. |
| OP, I would prepare a packet regardless of when you get the results. Our AART recommended doing one even if our child made the referral pool, just as added insurance to provide as much information as allowed for consideration. If your child doesn't get in, you will always wonder what else you could have done. It's worth it. |