| When we took our ds in for private testing for the wisc the tester made sure to do a big write up at the front end where she described his appearance, reported answers to personal questions she asked him, etc. When I asked why, she said it was to help the school identify him, as there is apparently a flourishing trade in fake Wisc takers (or, you hire a kid who kind of looks like yours and who has taken it before and is really good and present him as your own). This is especially in the TJ mania part of FCPS. |
The people looking at appeals are not from the child's school. They would have no clue if the description is accurate. Having said that, why would someone go through all that for AAP? And how do you get a 7 or 8 year old to pull off pretending to be someone else? I would never ask my kid to lie like that, but I'm also pretty sure they wouldn't pull it off with an adult asking them questions about their identity. You probably shouldn't have posted this. No need to give obsessed people ideas
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| AAP is barely advanced at our school. I can't imagine someone doing all this for a mediocre advanced program. |
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I would just send the child to the local public school and reapply. FCPS schools are very good, so your child will get a great education while you wait to hear about AAP.
What does it mean to "take" a score? |
Whites are obsessed with scamming their kids into AAP including bribing and cheating. |
This is one of the most absurd things I've seen on DCUM. |
+1000 |
Asians are tiger moms and prep like hell starting in preschool. |
Come on - why do we have to make this kind of generalization about whites and asians. I know white moms who prep and asian moms who can't care less about AAP or TJ. |
There are plenty of Asians/Indians in AAP program. This is the first time i am reading racial profiling could be the reason!! |
Indians are obsessed with Kumon. |
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Op here
Please let’s not take this to something it is not Let’s keep the topic on aap, selection process and what I could do next |
Things you could do: 1. Try to meet in person with the AAP coordinator 2. Set up a meeting with the principal of your local school to discuss placement in the Local Level IV classroom I don't know if there's much else you can do at this point. |
| I would take this to local media, and see if there is interest in some investigative journalism about whether the AAP selection process has bias (based on base school, race, private/public, etc.). |
There are plenty of Asians in Ivies also. That doesn't mean the Asian penalty doesn't exist. There is a perception that Asians prep (as evident by OP being told that some communities prep), so an Asian kid with high scores might be more scrutinized. If the child is in FCPS and has a high GBRS prepared by FCPS employees, that helps to rebut the bias that the child prepped. If the GBRS isn't prepared by FCPS personnel, then is may not be viewed as reliable. The problem is OP also submitted a high WISC, which was also the ignored. I'm not sure why some communities prepping overrides an WISC performed by an independent psychologist. OP deserves some answers on that front. When you start factoring in that some communities prep into the selection process, you run the risk of crossing the line into denying services based on race/ethnicity. You also penalize individual members of the communities based on stereotypes. I'm not saying that's what happened here, but the denial, along with the reference to communities prepping seems to suggest it could have been a factor. |