DP: You can look at the state cut-off for NMSF and the distribution within a state to see the same story that the NM commended scores show. Both show that there are a very unusually high number of scorers in the top percentiles for FCPS (and the DMV in particular). The highest state cutoffs are DC, NJ, MD, VA, and MA (221-223). The lowest state cut-offs for NMSF are quite a bit lower: Montana, Alaska, New Mexico, North Dakota, West Virginia, Wyoming are all below 210. |
I have heard that the Iready scores are starting to be weighed more in AAP admissions. But I had heard it was going from “no weight at all” to “can tip a borderline kid into getting into AAP” basically. |
A question for teachers - WHY do kids in AAP, who have demonstrated time and time again that they are advanced and doing just fine academically, have to take iReady two times every year?!? |
That isn’t a question for teachers. They don’t know, they probably agree with you and have no say. TBH my AAP kid had a harder time in Iready in grades 1,2 because he took it very seriously and got questions beyond his grade level that he would sit there and do. For example, he would do repeated addition because he hadn’t been taught multiplication and then answer the question correctly, so be put into the next level. The poor kid had to go back to finish during specials time and recess the day he took it. As he matured, he realized it meant nothing and stopped giving it the time of day. It is just stupid all around, but I think it was the dyslexia lobbying who wanted a universal screener and pushed for it in VA that actually is the reason why it is being used. |
IReady is surprisingly using the same reading passages. This is a shame bc the DC feels like they just remember it and guess through the answers. Rather than reading something new to them and applying it. |
Kids in AAP have not "demonstrated time and time again"... they demonstrated once in the year prior to their first year in AAP. FCPS does not kick kids out of AAP. Someone who may be "above and beyond" in second grade may regress in the years the follow. My above reply doesn't mean I'm for I-ready testing - it's equally as goood and/or bad for genEd as for AAP. But FCPS loves standardized testing, so that's why we have it. |
Teacher here. Any student scoring 75 percentile or higher should not be forced to take the test again in the spring. It is dumb. |
True, but if they're only looking for kids who are below grade level and intend to do nothing with high scores, there's no need to administer iready to any kids who scored pass advanced or a high pass proficient on the previous year's SOL test. It would just be a waste of everyone's time. |
You know that kids in AAP still fail the SOL, right? And many kids score in the low 400s. |
Yep. Gen Ed and AAP kids alike who demonstrated in the SOL that they’re at or above grade level shouldn’t need to waste time on a test used only to flag below grade level kids. AAP kids who score lower than 450 on the SOL should be removed from the program unless they have some relevant SN accommodation. |
My aap kid was given i-ready three times a year in 4th (school was closed), 5th and 6th |
Teachers know that they don't have classrooms full of kids scoring 40 points above the 99th percentile, much to the chagrin of the status seekers. |
I know this may sound crass, but if your child is at all enriched, he or she should be scoring at the 99th percentile in both math and reading. In a way, if they are enriched, but they don't get that score, you might want to rethink your child's abilitiesand/your approach to their academic welfare. |
My gen ed kid always scored 99% on math on iready and advanced passed on sol and was never offered AAP math. I don’t think anyone even looked at his scores. He went on to MS and HS to take honors and AP and did very well. |
I don't mean to offend, but it sounds like your gen ed kid's teachers and/or parents were remiss for not placing him on at least Level III AAP for math. If he turned out "very well", then that maybe all's well that ends well, but we can't but wonder "what if"... |