13:18, I see what you are saying. The kids I knew of were Level 4 eligible, so I sort of assumed that what their base school gave them was their best Level 4 equivalent. But you are probably right that those were considered Level 3 and not Level 4 services. |
It is possible to defer services and opt to reactivate them at any point, up to grade 8. http://www.fcps.edu/DIS/gt/packet/Fillable_AAP%20Reactivation%20Full-Time%20Program.pdf |
These kids are older. Both are in the GTC in middle school now. ![]() |
No, not true at all. The 10-12% number is not the percentage of eligible students it is the percentage of students enrolled in GT level IV centers. In 2006 the total level IV center enrollment was 7,139 out 61,178 students (11.7%). Since 2006 the percentage has only increased. In 2005, the average COGATs of students in GT was 119 verbal, 126 non-verbal, 121 quatitative and 129 for the NNAT which are all below 97%. The GT center statistics can be found here http://www.boarddocs.com/vsba/fairfax/board.nsf/39c6389c088be51585256e56000c1bf2/2b1b2b585a5d305e852570fb004f3f9f/$FILE/Gifted%20and%20Talented%20Center%20Program.pdf |
I do not agree with you 100%. My kid had strong test scores (NNAT-146, COGAT 140), but GBRS is only 6 (I was told has to be 12-16 to be qualified), low ratings from the school. But his work samples are very strong- he had lots of solutions off 2008/2009 AMC8 test- the math contest for grade 8 student. I let the central office know that the school's GBRS is very baised, obviously the committee listened. He was acceptted to AAP center on 4/30. |
22:23, is your child 2E? To me, that would explain why the school was so biased and he got sort shrift. If so, I would say they don't understand him. |
22:23, you wrote that really pushed with your child's school and the central office beforehand. So you must have thought teacher and school had a lot of influence at that time. And they clearly do. There are probably other factors at work. Plus your child had very high scores -- well above the cut off. I agree with 06:14, perhaps your child is 2E. The committee may have been able to figure that out.
I agree too that Donalan's arguments and opinions are inconsistent and some statements of "fact" are not correct. Donalan, is English your second language? I think this might explain why you seem to be contradicting yourself. It is admirable to want your child to be happy. We all want that. Keep in mind that many of these children are the ones who are marginally qualified. Parents of kids in the 70th percentile who receive S grades are not trying to get their child into AAP. They know that would be pushing when a child is not ready. The question concerns children who scored in the 96th, 97th, 98th, 99th percentiles with O grades and maybe some Gs. Perhaps their GBRS wasn't great. Perhaps it was, but their test scores were lower. GBRS is HIGHLY subjective. Perhaps the regular classroom isn't servicing those children well enough. Parents wish to see if the AAP classes would be a better mix for their child. It may be. It may not be. Once in the AAP program a parent may always return their child to a "normal" classroom if AAP isn't right for them. Some children who don't make the cut for AAP may have still been better off in AAP. THAT is why parents advocate for a child. They too want their child to be happy. |
18:00 - I'm the poster you refer to - thanks for sharing that document - very interesting. Based on my own DCs scores, I thought eligible scores would have generally been high across the categories. Obviously there are wide ranges of test results even among children who qualify for the pool. |
Uneven scores are very common. My DD had a perfect score on NNAT, and good, but not qualifying (low 120s) scores on the CoGAT. This is why we did the WISC just in case we needed it for an appeal but it ended up we didn't need it, at least not for the appeal. We have found it very useful info about her in general.
I think kids who are very visual spatial often don't do well on the CoGAT. The second grade CoGAT in particular is read to the students by the teacher and they have to mark the answer on their sheet. I think the format is a little confusing for some kids and if they are not good auditory processors, then the CoGAT is often hard for them. |
How does the 2E thing play out in the committee? DO you think they want to exclude 2E kids or do they get it that those kids are bright and need the program but may have other issues? I guess I'm asking whether parents should try to hide the 2E from the committee? |
I did not mean to imply that teacher input was THE deciding factor. In fact, my point was that there is NO deciding factor - the decision is based upon the complete file and there are several relevant factors. In your case, your child had one weak factor (GBRS) but several strong ones (test scores, work samples) and got in. In other cases, children have weaker test scores but a stronger GBRS number and teacher commentary, and they get in. I was correcting Donalan's misstatement that teachers have "little or nothing" to do with the process, when in fact they have a great deal to do with it. I would not want other parents to think that test scores are the only important criterion, as Donalan implied, because that's simply not true. If teacher input didn't matter, you wouldn't have needed to contact the central office to explain why your child had a low GBRS score. I don't think you and I really disagree here; I think you were just pointing out a situation where the GBRS did not sway the committee, and that is useful information to share with the forum. |
I am 22:23, my kid is @2E. |
Was that apparent from the application? I ask because I may have a 2E kid and I'm trying to figure it all out. |
Well my guess is that a majority of students placed above the 97th percentile or above on at last least one of the four tests. You need to score that on one of the tests to get in the initial screening pool after all. I just have my doubts about the accuracy of the ability tests in general. At my child’s school over 30% of the 2nd graders (30 students) made it into the pre-screening pool including my son. But I believe that a 50 question COGAT or NNAT is never going to be as strong an indicator ability as say the WISC, GRE or SAT. We are talking about a 50 question test given to 2nd graders. This is why a cringe a bit when the 97% number is being tossed around as some sort of holy grail of ability. I think that the GBRS, DRA, parent comments and work samples are all also valid indicators for determining eligibility. Probably the metric that I would trust the most if I were on the review committee would be the GBRS. I believe that it would fairly easy to develop a process for accurately identifying the top 2-3% of 2nd graders in Fairfax county (unless for example a student has gone “underground” or has issues) since you are at the very edge of the bell curve. On the other hand I do not believe that any process is ever going to be that accurate for identifying the top 12% of 2nd graders. Another thing to note is that the pool of eligible students is getting bigger each year. At this rate it may not be too long until the top 20 percent of students are being admitted into the program. I guess that since my son made the cut into the GT program that, I should be tempted to wish that the pool not get diluted down further by admiting more students but, at this rate, I just hope that the program does not one day get eliminated completely to save money. |
PP, I have to disagree a bit because I have one of those "underground" students. DC has strong test scores (CogAt and WISC -- NNAT not so great) but is only in the middle groups at school. I have to ask how a kid that's scoring 97-99 percentile on several of the subtests is only in the "average" groups. I feel like somehow the instruction isn't working or the school is not bothering to find out how well DC can do (they tend to test the kids to grade level and thne stop, I think). My DC did not get in and I think GBRS tanked DC. I think a different approach ( or a more aggressive approach) might be just what the doctor ordered. I think DC could perform in the higher groups at school but the teachers don't seem inclined to bother finding out. I really feel like my child is falling between the cracks. |