
One center in all of Fairfax County? Do you even live here? There would need to be one per pyramid (at least) and buses would move far fewer kids. It’s no different than what exists other than the size of the cohort. |
I don't care about the label. You can keep the label. I want my kid to have access to the curriculum kids teacher thinks they are ready for. There's a bunch of kids out there sitting around not getting to learn much in their areas of strength |
Wow - get a clue, indeed. You continue to confuse "differentiation" with flexible groupings, held in separate classrooms. That's nothing at all like differentiation within the same classroom, which is what you are describing. Of course that doesn't work. One teacher can't possibly offer every child in his/her classroom academics tailored to their abilities. That's why the kids should go to Rm. A for advanced language arts; Rm. B for grade-level LA; Room C for remedial, etc. Same for all core classes. And "flexible" means Larla can move up to Rm. A if she shows advanced skills in Rm. B. No testing in required to simply access a slightly more advanced curriculum. You seem to want to make this far more complicated that it needs to be. We all know the reason for that. And btw - there is no system in which kids label other kids as "dumb" than the current AAP / GE division. None. |
+1 Sounds like my kid's 3rd grade (GE) teacher a few years ago. She refused to believe he was reading at a 7th grade level (all of the Redwall books, among others) and said "he couldn't possibly be understanding the content." We had a conference with her to ask why she wasn't allowing him to write a book report on the books, to demonstrate his knowledge, and she said it simply wasn't possible. Honestly, some teachers are great. Others are absolutely horrible and have no intention of letting kids excel past some arbitrary line in the sand they've drawn. Having advanced groups would solve this issue. We could have insisted our son be placed in the advanced LA group that he deserved to be in. |
Why should a teacher be able to gatekeep advanced classes any more than some arbitrary score be required to access them? Simply allow all the kids access to the advanced work and see who actually does it - and does it well. Those are the kids who belong in that group. DP |
No group for you. |
Exactly. Mastered those fundamentals? Great, on Monday you start in the advanced group! Good for you! FCPS should WANT kids to reach their potential - ALL KIDS. |
For my kid it's too late but I'll advocate for future kids in the same boat. At center school with a Gen Ed kid whose stregnth is math, teacher thought kid should really be in advanced math, but there was no room to push in. Fast forward to kids receiving guidance about middle school schedules. The kids are told to consider trying an honors class in an area of strength. My kid decides math is their strong subject and that's the honors class they most want. BUT, Gen Ed kids are also told that it's not advised to take honors math because they would have to skip important math skills to do it. That's BS. There should be a natural path to honors for any subject the kid wants to take. Just give the kids the curriculum their actual teachers think they are ready for... |
I should add, this kid enrolled in honors anyway and passed advanced on sol....but ...the guidance they give as blanket guidance to gen Ed kids caused much unnecessary stress about the decision to take the right class. |
DP. My GE kids attend a center school. Socially, it's awful. However, none of what you describe has occurred. They've both been taught Caesar's English - for the entire year. They both not only researched their living history museum projects, but also dressed up and gave live presentations. With the exception of math, we have found that the AAP/GE academics are identical. It's a joke to claim that AAP kids need to be in their own segregated classrooms when the kids in GE right next door are doing *the same things.* Reading your post makes it clear that you are the one who is uninformed - and probably deliberately so. |
DP. A better question would be, why are AAP parents fighting like hell to exclude all of the other kids who are perfectly able to do what amounts to a slightly advanced curriculum - especially since you know full well our kids will be together in high school honors and AP classes. Not to mention, colleges... |
+100 And therein lies the difference. AAP parents REALLY, REALLY like the label and very much want to keep it exclusive. Other parents, whose kids are perfectly capable of AAP work, just want them to have the same access. I don't care what they call it either. But every child deserves the chance to work to their own potential rather than stagnating at a level that is too easy for them. FCPS needs to make it *easy* for kids to move up, rather than placing barriers in the way of achievement. |
THIS ^^^ |
Precisely because parents like you will never accept that their child doesn't belong in the top group. You refuse to accept either test scores or teacher evaluation to sort who goes where. The teacher evaluation is literally picking which kids could go faster and which need extra help - but you refuse to accept their evaluation. Try again next year with a new teacher, or pay for a third part WISC evaluation to show your child belongs there. Don't make everyone else slow down because you refuse to accept the truth you don't want to hear. |
It is easy to move up (for those who can show they should be moved up). New kids were admitted to the AAP center every year my kid was in elementary school. |