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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
News flash: We aren’t. Your kid is selected, great! And I don’t care that our kids will be together in HS. It’s the peer group now that helps set the important path. |
Different schools I suppose. Our experience has been not been similar, and your school must be an anomaly because everyone else here is complaining that their kids are being left behind. If it’s just a label, like another PP said, and your kids are doing an identical work, then WHY DO YOU CARE? |
It's a theoretical number. Not every school is going to have an equal 1/3 split of abilities is my point so someone would get placed in a class that doesn't match. |
+1 this exactly |
With benchmark everything is literally the same. Everyone complains because it's DCUM and most people are clueless. The only difference is extra worksheets and reading time when they finish early because elementary is super easy. I'm sure if your child is finishing their assignments early you could request the same. There is not a magical place where kids are receiving all this extra enrichment that your DC is missing out on. |
No. AAP is different. Kids work at a faster pace. The peer group is less disruptive. And depending on the teacher and their years of experience, the difference is substantial. We are at a center school now and we've been at a base school with no AAP options... the vibe is just different. |
You keep saying this, it's like you haven't read the thread at all. |
My child is in level 4, if you need to tell yourself this to make you feel better have at it. They are getting the same material. There are still disruptive kids. |
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The only place where I think LIV makes a real difference for students is in Title 1 or near Title 1 schools where fewer kids come to school with academic support at home. Kids who have parents who read to them, taught them their sounds and letters, taught them their numbers, taught them their colors and shapes are already ahead of the kids who are arriving from homes that don't do those things. We had friends who bought a home in the boundary of a Title 1 school who very quickly realized that most of the kids in their childs Kindergarten class knew none of what most DCUM posters would consider the basics. Their daughter spent K being taught material she already knew, from home and preschool, and working on her own. They moved, even though they loved the Teachers and Admin at the school, so she could be at a school where she had more peers and the class would be able to move at the standard pace.
Title 1 schools have kids who are ahead and need a seperate class so they can receive the regular curriculum. That is why I am fine with different in-pool designations at schools because different schools are going to have a different pool of kids who might need a different class to meet their needs. The kid who needs that class at a Title 1 school is very different then the kid who needs it at a high SES school, where a far higher percentage of kids are on grade level and even ahead. Most of the kids in AAP at the higher SES schools would be fine in the regular classroom if the regular classroom differentiated but they don't. There are too many levels in the regular classroom to differentiate. If we actually set classes so that Teachers only had to plan lessons for 2-3 levels of kids, everyone would be far happier. But we won't do that because tracking has a crappy history. For the record, everything I hear from MS and HS is that the Gen Ed classes are now essentially remedial classes and the only place to learn somehing is in Honors classes. Multiple friends at multiple MS and HS have said that they tried Gen Ed classes, at the suggestions of Counselors, in MS and very quickly moved their kids into the Honors classes because the Gen Ed classes were moving so slowly and there were a good number of disruptive kids in the class. |
Nothing says that you can't have multiple classes for advanced kids just like nothing says you can't have multiple classrooms for kids who are behind. |
Segregation |
It's not segregation when every student has the opportunity to be selected for the group. Not having your student is selected for something is not a valid claim of discrimination. Everyone is eligible, not everyone can be selected. This same logic applies to sports teams and theater shows and a thousand other things in life. Filling your student's head with this nonsense is a real misrepresentation all around. |
Trying to keep your kid away from the poors is segregation. |
Shame on you for calling the non AAP kids "the poors." Do better. |
Oh good grief. It's you again. The selection panel is not perfect. Teacher evaluations are not perfect. There are kids getting rejected who have high CogAT scores, high iready scores, and high teacher recommendations. There are other kids getting rejected with high test scores, but for whatever reason, the teacher didn't like the kid. If a kid is above grade level in all measures, the kid should be allowed to access advanced materials. They will slow no one down. Why are you refusing to accept the truth that AAP selection is very imperfect? I'll throw more anecdotes out there. My gen ed kid frequently didn't have a reading group, because there weren't enough above grade level kids. Meanwhile, my AAP kid got no attention from the AAP teacher, because she had a below grade level group and a few on grade level groups that needed her attention. My gen ed kid had a better math experience than my AAP kid, and the gen ed advanced math class moved faster and had more interesting projects. The reason is that the AAP class constantly had to slow down for the kids who were completely average in math, but in AAP because they were strong at language arts. How does any of this make sense? |