I don't know how much the reduction is, but GMU offers a reduced fee to children who qualify for free and reduced-price meals - http://cap.gmu.edu/Fee.html. |
+1 Barring true, documented need, affording or not affording is often a choice of how one wishes to spend one's money -- vacations, cable TV, private school tuition, nice home, designer clothes, helping aging parents, donating to charities, pool membership, new car, WISC. The WISC costs the same or less than a typical children's birthday party at a bounce house, laser tag arena, etc. Less than some iPhones. |
+100 |
Thanks for sharing your experience! I compiled the list to help others, see where the appeal cut-offs are this year and get feedback from experienced members like you! |
+1 |
| Has anyone received a decision yet? I heard the committee has finished with the process! |
| This board will light up with activity on the day that decisions are received. All is quiet, so nothing yet. |
Letters are scheduled to go in the mail on Friday, June 28. http://www.boarddocs.com/vsba/fairfax/Board.nsf/files/8XZS6F70FB55/$file/N2401.2012.pdf |
Yes, but why should parents have to pay for a test that determines their placement in a public schools? I don't think that parents are talking about choosing between a blowout birthday or a WISC or pool membership (though I know what I'd opt for). I think some rightly wonder why something optional should be a determining factor in an AAP decision. |
| I mean optional, and expensive. |
basically people are buying their way in. But like the PP said, it's their money to spend as they wish. |
| yes they are buying their way in. and what about people, and I hope there are more than a few of them, who have problems with this from an ethical standpoint? is it fair that I can essentially afford to overrule a no decision for my child, while other parents might not have the means to, or even know it's a possibility? This is not how you pull a class of the best and brightest together. |
I'm sure you're old enough to understand how the world works.
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| What a snotty comment, PP. Glad you're not teaching my kids, as much as I worry for yours . . . This may be the way your world works, but it shouldn't be the way public school operates when handling grade schoolers educations. |
| shouldn't be, perhaps. But it is what it is. Sorry, I don't see how that is snotty. I mean what would all the for-profit testers do if people couldn't submit a WISC after their kids bombed the CigAT and GBRS? Have you no heart? |