
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? |
Technically, everyone CAN be selected. There is no cap on AAP admissions. It is segregation when the selection process is opaque and not based on any objective metrics. It also is segregation when the bottom half of the AAP kids and the top 10% of the gen ed kids are completely indistinguishable. |
Karma.... |
But there are plenty of kids who get in in second grade who can't keep up with the advanced math. Why not give those kids the math level that best suits them too? |
Shame on the people who are using AAP to isolate themselves from “the poors”. |
My kids Gen Ed peer group is fine. It's the access to the curriculum kids needs that is lacking |
It’s segregation when you look at the financial and racial profiles of AAP vs gen-ed. |
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Then centers should expand access to advanced math curriculum |
Reminder that when you throw around “segregation” and “racism” for stuff like this, you hurt legitimate claims and turn a lot of folks away from your agenda. AAP is not racism or segregation, you’re just being provocative. |
I think you should do more research on the definition of segregation and how it does not apply here. Tossing around inflammatory words without any real application is not only ignorant, it's harmful. |