Wow. Does anyone else think its so crazy to have 40% from one school and 1% from another school? |
| Yes. I agree with pp who said what seemed to matter most was the individual school staff. Especially since OP's ds had classmates who were rejected in-pool. |
Yes, it’s crazy! I’m the OP of this post. One thing is that families love our school - I wonder if we just don’t have many families that do anything past the testing at school? I know a few families that put the parent referral packet together but not many. |
| I guess if you balance out the 1% schools with the 40% schools you get an average of 15% or so. I think most of us hearing that stat assumed it was about 15% *from each school*. Not half the class at one school and one child from another school. |
| Do more kids get in at center schools or schools with local level 4 classes than just basic schools? The discrepancy in these numbers is unreal. |
No, we are not a center. |
Just to clarify, I meant 100 out of the entire 2nd grade population. That is not the number referred. |
Local level 4? Or is there probably a directly line between FARMS rate at a school and few vs. many acceptances? |
This 100% and of course AAP acceptance is very important in some communities and their kid study for the tests for years, etc. If 30% of the school gets in to AAP, of course there is way more pressure to get your kid in as well. |
This is the same as our school (a center). But I know that almost all of the 2nd grade parents at our school will do a referral if their kids are not in-pool. |
| Our school is about 45% FARMs and only had 4 accepted out of around 95 second graders. I know some parents are appealing. |
Yes, Local Level 4 and about 10% FARM rate. |
Our school had about 70 second graders, the 4 ended up getting in. We are not a center and don't have local level IV. As I said above, 25% FARMS. I don't think a single person appealed by doing outside testing. I think parents are just happy with our school. I know 3 families personally who have children who got into AAP and chose not to switch to the center school (from different years than my son's second grade class that I gave the numbers on). I fell like, again, it just goes to show that it's a really flawed program. There's no way there's that big a discrepancy between schools in terms of actual scholastic aptitude. |
| We are a center with 2% Free/reduced and last year we had 27 kids go to AAP out of 94. |
| Does it seem like center schools have a lot more of their second graders going into AAP than regular old schools? |