Can't gen ed kids elect to take honors classes at that point? BTW, My AAP 7th grader only has core AA classes; the rest of the classes are not "separated."
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No but there are probably some AAP kids in these mixed classes since it’s a center school. There are more AAP kids roaming the halls overall at center middle schools. Better environment overall. |
PP you are responding to...my kid does go to a center AAP but since there other centers in the area (Vienna/McLean), it is not mostly AAP kids roaming the halls. Kids can elect to take regular or honor classes starting in 7th grade if they are not AAP. I would think that kids who elect all honors are similar peer wise to AAP kids. |
Then go to high school with those you done want in your middle school. |
Tes they can. Where are you getting you incorrect info from. Some MS are “All Honors” as well. Same exact curriculum 2019 for mine. |
The problem is that the population of students are over the place in terms of capability. The teacher can't differentiate 25 different paths. Not enough time for that. Therefore, many complain that the teacher is not helpful. |
Cooper and Longfellow in McLean are both AAP "centers," but only in-boundary kids go to those schools, so they aren't like Carson, which has hundreds of AAP kids who live outside Carson's base boundaries. So they are a bit more balanced. |
Yes, but the AAP classes are different and this is a school where everyone is encouraged to take honors |
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I don’t think local level iv is any better than aap centers at this point. They both separate kids and make one feel below the other. And quite frankly, getting into the program seems pretty random to me.
I’d like to see the whole program be eliminated and then the kids should be put into different groups for individual subjects. Just my opinion though. |
It depends on the MS school. Some AAP and honors are the same. |
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OP, you asked re: elementary school. Back to your question. Yes, it sucks. I hate the existence of AAP. We were at a Center school. We worked at strengthening friendships in whatever class they were in and riding it out. Oldest was pupil placed into AAP w/out help from me or additional testing or prep, eventually. I wasn't going to push to make it happen because I was glad both of my kids, for most of the time, had the same experience, some of the same teachers.
The existence of AAP however, was the worst part of attending FCPS. It gets better. It gets better as they progress into MS and HS and advanced classes are open to all. They kids remember though, who was in AAP and who wasn't. Some of the Gen Ed kids take pride in kicking some AAP academic butt in the later grades. |
She'll be happy in Middle School and High School knowing she wasn't part of the "weird" group. LOL. |
The students are separated. At schools with a lot of farms students encouraged to try honors, the classes will end up moving at very different paces. |
Good lord the parents are the absolute worst part of FCPS. Are you 13, pp? |
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All three of my kids were gen ed at an AAP center and it was not a problem — it all washes out in middle and high school anyway (non-AAP kids can take Honors in MS, and in HS everyone is grouped together). One of my gen ed kids is now a senior and taking 4 APs this year, has above a 4.0 gpa, etc. — just like her AAP friends.
The way I look at it is this: gen ed is still giving your child a foundation from which to work and improve. All my kids got that foundation and thrived as they got older. |