I think you are looking at it from the wrong end of the of the telescope. There is a cutoff (it's usually the 98th percentile or higher on both tests, if you didn't make the cutoff with one score in the 99th percentile, it's probably because you were below the 98th percentile on one of the tests) that is objectively applied to everyone. But there are some schools where there aren't enough kids making the cutoff to fill even one class so to fill those spaces, they lower the cutoff for those schools. They aren't applying a higher standard to your kid. They are applying a lower standard to kids from crappy schools. The cutoff at the richest school in the county is not higher than the cutoff at Greenbriar west with a 20% FARM rate. But the cutoff starts to drop when you have a school where half the kids are ESL and 2/3rds are FARM students. If you want that lower cutoff, you have to attend a crappier school. Or you can just do a parent referral. |
PP, can you share where the info in bold comes from? Because unless there is misinformation in the "in pool" thread: that parent's kid in Lake Braddock pyramid reported the child had 138 on NNAT and 136 on CogAT and didn't make the pool. Both these scores are in the 99th percentile. |
Yes they can. They might not do it. But it is easily done. |
Right, the point is that they don’t/won’t do it, therefore the home school is NOT accommodating those high scoring student who you allege are already being served by base curriculum. |
I think it was on this site years ago. Are any of the cogat subelement scores below 133? |
I don't know the sub scores because they weren't posted (maybe the original poster Lake Braddock will be following and can fill in), but the overall score of 136 on CogAT is in the 99th percentile. It makes no sense that a kid whose scores are in the 99th percentile wouldn't even be in the pool to be evaluated. |
I don’t think the info in bold is consistent with the top 10% criteria. I know a kid last year with close to 140 cogat who didn’t make it to pool in our base school. For Braddock, Sangster is really competitive so it’s likely that the PP’s kid goes there |
Sangster is a center school. It does kinda suck to have your kid at a center school where they didn't make the cut w/ a 99th percentile score and kids/neighbors are attending AAP at your same school, but got in with lower scores because they came from a school (just 5 min away, but different boundary) with lower cutoff. |
Is Sangster that competitive at the K-2 level, though, or more particularly because of the large AAP cohort in 3-6? I'd be interested in how big the gap really is between the base community and the neighboring schools - my guess is it's not as significant as you think. |
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In pool =/= admitted.
I do think in pool could probably be a bit more nuanced. Something like 98th percentile, if that doesn't identify the top 10% school, take top 10 or something like that. It would mean that highly prepped schools don't miss top students who didn't prep and got 98th or 99th percentile (but not 150+). And ensure at least 10% of students are referred. Alternatively do top x% of each school who were not parent referred (making it truly just another mechanism rather than potential for complete overlap). Or just stop calling it a pool and use the mechanism as a way of doing teacher referrals and not announce it |
Adv Math should be offered at all ES. Is it not? We have Gen Ed kids who flex into Adv Math. We look at IReady Data and SOL scores. |
Our base school doesn't offer local full time AAP or advanced math until grade 5. |
Did you read the last paragraph of my post? At our center school it is offered, yes, but they make the students jump through hoops every year with the testing to get in and it isn’t approved for 1-2 months after school has started, so the students have a lot of catching up to do once they’re finally admitted in. |
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Adv math is offered at my elementary school in Vienna and kid was offered it for 4th (letter came home May of 3rd grade for our signature), and is now in 5th doing the two yr track to potentially do Algebra I in 7th. Again got notice in May of 4th grade for this year.
Not doing level 4 AAP due to learning disabilities but very successful in adv math |
My understanding is that AAP is supposed to ensure kids who have enrichment needs in their school are getting them. However, my question is, if this is true, how did the old system work to ensure this? A school-specific in-pool cut off makes sense but a county-wide one does not, as the latter would surely lead to some schools being overrepresented in the review process, no? Can someone who has been in FCPS for a while help me understand? Is it that the goal of AAP has changed overtime or is it that the approach was misaligned with the goal and has become more aligned? (or something else entirely?) |