
I did. We all did. Just like at work, I know where I stand with my boss, and where I rank on certain tasks compared to my teammates. It takes multiple data points, of course, probably couldn't have figured it out accurately from one snapshot of all of us in second grade |
Well you certainly cleared some things up. Sure, you got it. |
I'm really not sure how your child got into AAP given how at least one of his parents doesn't seem to be able to comprehend what she reads. |
Yes. And no more of this "only the top 10% of a given school should be considered advanced" crap. A kid is advanced or she's not advanced. It shouldn't be about HOW MANY advanced kids there are in a school. Why should my kid be declined because we chose a high SES school with a large Asian and Indian population even though her scores are SIGNIFICANTLY better than family friends' kids who got into AAP at other schools? You're saying my child isn't advanced solely because she has a more high achieving peer group in her school? She doesn't get access to the curriculum solely because of that???? Talk about inequity. We should have the same thresholds and criteria for every child in FCPS. So what if 50% of one school is AAP and only 5% of another is. SO WHAT??? |
Just the fact that you would say, "a better peer group," is cringeworthy. I sincerely hope FCPS reads threads like this. |
Precisely this. If they were, they'd let all kids access AAP. It's very simple. |
+100 The absolutist PP is beautifully making the case for why a segregated, test-in only AAP should be a thing of the past and why AAP should be available - at any time! - to any students capable of a slightly accelerated curriculum. Which is all AAP is. |
Agree, but I think CogAT, etc. tests are unnecessary. Give everyone the work. Those who can do it, do it. Those who can't / aren't interested can be in the regular group until / if they are ready. A test score really has nothing to do with actual classwork. |
+1 End segregation. |
When I was in school the “smart” Kids were together every year in the smart kids group - home room 1. Tier 2 in homeroom 2, then the average kids were in homeroom 3 and the slow kids were in homeroom 4. Every year. It was very VERY obvious who the teacher felt were smart vs regular vs slow. It wasn’t better. |
So to make this come true every school would have to be departmentalized for every subject? The kids would have to regroup for science social studies math and reading. And elementary school would basically be middle school with fewer kids. I’m really not a fan of that and would fight hard against it. |
Lorton Station is starting the process of departmentalizing grades 4-6 next year. Teachers will deliver content on subjects to entire grades.
I wonder if this is being directed by FCPS, with thoughts of implementing it across all elementary schools at some point. |
Of course it is being directed from the top. The whole comprehensive boundary review is nothing but a ruse to keep the peasants occupied and fighting among themselves while the intellectual elite at Gatehouse do what they want behind the scenes. |
Ok- many schools already do this. BUT, contrary to what the PP who wanted this for AAP, when it is done Math/science and LA/social studies are grouped together. The children also usually stay together and as a class switch teachers. If you have to regroup to meet the needs of every kid, you are going to not really have a home room and will change for every subject because some kids qualify for AAP in just one subject. Some schools already do this for SIXTH grade in elementary which makes sense as it is watered down middle school. It is not typically practice from 3-5 and it should not be. Developmentally those kids still need the steadiness of being with the same kids for most of the day. |
A long long time ago in a far away place (different state) we were grouped and moved for each subject starting in 3rd grade. And we were with different kids for each subject based on strengths, and kids could be moved up and down at any time to meet their needs. Honestly, the first time I heard the fcps talking point of meeting every kid where they were at I assumed that meant some sort of movement up and down so that they could always be learning what they are ready for. Never expected to be told by a teacher based on kids fall iready she wouldn't be teaching them anything until February... It worked because everyone was getting what they needed. Did we know which group was the smart group and which group was struggling? Yes, of course, and today's kids are smart enough to figure it out too in the current system. But, everyone was always in a group where they were being challenged to grow. And we were happy for kids when they moved up. And everyone knew what their stregnths and weaknesses were. And we could see that maybe one kid who struggled with language arts was a genius at math. And another kid who struggled with math was an amazing writer, etc. Instead of saying oh well you're not good at everything so you don't get the curriculum where you need it, we were all more likely to be exposed to a challenge in our strength. My guess is someone will argue that this system didn't work for the bottom of the bottom, and I would be interested to see how the data compare these kids outcomes in the two systems. |