
#1: It's because they look at their second-grade children as the equivalent of professors who've been awarded tenure or Supreme Court judges appointed to lifetime positions. ![]() ![]() ![]() #2: It's because they think Carson and Rocky Run are "better" than other schools even when that's just a function of the kids who happen to end up in AAP there. |
There definitely needs to be middle school AAP at all the middle schools. I can’t imagine any FCPS MS that isn’t large enough to offer it.
For ES, I’m on the fence. It would be great if they could standardize the program so the experience wasn’t so different between the centers vs. LLIV, and even the differences between LLIV programs can be significant. I do think some pyramids would need a center because there just wouldn’t be enough kids qualifying at the base schools, especially those with a high number of ESOL recent arrivals. All the elementary schools, whether center or LLIV or no LLIV at all, should start advanced math in 3rd and kids can requalify every year based on grades and/or SOL performance. If that means kids move around the classrooms for math in 3rd, so be it. That’s how my kid’s school handles it and it’s fine. The principals are (in general, not just with AAP stuff) given way too much leeway to run the school however they want, and it contributes to some of this increasing paranoia amongst parents that their kids aren’t getting as good of an experience as the school down the road. More standardization would cut down on some of the angst around AAP. |
Glad you can admit that cohorts matter and that centers produce better cohorts. |
There have been multiple posters in this thread wishing those who couldn't Pass Advanced the SOL be bumped out of AAP. I personally also wish my kid's base MS (Franklin) got all the AAP kids from its boundary instead of most of them electing to go to Carson. My kid chose Carson because all his AAP friends he had been in class with since 3rd grade were also going to Carson. If Franklin had all those AAP kids the program would rival Carson's in just a couple years and people wouldn't feel like they needed to choose the center for the "better" program. |
Those of us who didn't prep their kids in order to get them into AAP would be fully on board with yearly evaluations. No matter what criteria is used to determine where they draw the line though it wouldn't stop this same level of complaining from the parents of kids who felt they just missed the cut. |
Bothers me none. I'm happy for your child no matter their placement, be it third grade or in every AP class in high school. Your child's academic placement/schedule has no impact on my family whatsoever. This is something I wish the gen ed parents intent on tearing down AAP could agree on, instead of their vile jealousy of children. |
Hey Alicia here- I’m not confused at all. I’m just taking your rather naive points and showing you the result of your thinking in the real world. You can’t do flexible groupings in separate classrooms for everyone. Scheduling wise it won’t work. Flexible groupings mean kids are constantly floating around. If a kid needs advanced math, but low reading and the low reading group meets with the reading teacher during the time the high math group is in math- where is the kid going to attend class? This is why this works in middle school because the sheer number of kids allows multiple sections of the same class. If all the kids are meeting for math at the same time, all the teachers will still have to know all of the curriculum for each subject and the plus for departmentalizing for teachers is that they only have to deal with one subject. If you think switching teachers for kids in the middle of the year after every marking period or semester will work, that is naive as well. Getting to know a new teacher and a class style takes a few weeks. Changing class composition leads to instability and kids scores will go down for bit as they get to know new procedures, teaching styles etc. This works ok in high schools, but they have even switched to block schedules and they keep the same teachers for the year now. Also, the way flexible groupings are supposed to work is kids switch up groups when they start new skills. That means a kid who has math facts down, may not have geometry down and if you think they are switching for just one unit, please see the above issues for why that won’t work. What if kid a was in gen ed math for grade 4 and missed the grade 4/5 curriculum and then in grade 6 they go to 5/6- they will have missed half a year of instruction and have to catch up which will slow the class down. Also, these groups will always have kids of different abilities in them even when they are segregated by “smartness” If AAP goes, that is fine, but don’t put some half thought out system in there like you are proposing. |
No, because one is an accurate representation of an opinion (better peer group, for example), and one is the incorrect and offensive use of an inflammatory word that demonstrates ignorance. |
It's interesting that people think Carson's program is "better." I sent kids through both Carson's AAP program and Franklin's AAP program, and there was no comparison. Franklin's AAP program was far superior, at least when my kids went through it. |
DP. PP is a snob. Maybe a bigot. But, definitely a snob. |
Yes, I saw your earlier post saying that and I was very surprised. I don't think your opinion is the prevailing one. I only know of one family that sent their kid to Franklin instead of Carson when given the choice. I'm also good friends with a teacher at Franklin that feels the same way and shares my opinion that Franklin could be just as good if they got "their" AAP kids (and those school-invested families) back. As an example, just look at the after school programs offered at both schools. Franklin can't compare with what Carson offers. And I know you said the Franklin teachers were great (and I won't say otherwise), but I met all my kid's Carson teachers for 7th grade and every one had been teaching AAP right there at Carson for 10+ years. It was a stark contrast to our experience throughout elementary school at both our center school and base school. |
This goes back to what PP was saying though - Franklin would be the equivalent of Carson if it, too, was an AAP Center with THAT cohort of kids (is it Waples, Crossfield & Navy? What other schools are zoned to Franklin but go to Carson?) |
As far as AAP vs. gen ed goes, pretty much every other school system in the country can deliver mildly accelerated content to somewhat above average kids. FCPS is the only one that buses mildly bright kids to a completely different school to deliver content that is at best 1 year above grade level. It really is absurd. AAP centers should be for the kids who are outliers in their school who need instruction at 2+ years above grade level. |
From looking at the map I'd guess it was Waples, Navy, and probably Oak Hill. It looks like Crossfield is in-boundary for Carson. |
Bigotry is assuming that there can't be diverse kids in the better peer group. You are the only one suggesting that as a possibility. At our center, there are many minorities of all backgrounds in the program. Multiple posters now have directly or indirectly pointed out that it is the better peer group/ cohort that is what makes the centers stronger and more appealing to families with that choice. That isn't snobbery. It is the truth. |