Never put a fork, spoon, fork, spoon in a row, and ask what comes next. Kid might pickup on patterns concept, and that's prepping for CogAT. If kids enters school with any home learning, kid must be from a rich family. |
So true! |
They’re trying to help the rich. Dumb down society and the rich will flourish without competition. They will still get their services elsewhere and society will fall behind. It’s a win win for the rich and the private school establishment. |
I'm 100% sure the poster of this thread is doing it in bad faith to stir trouble. They actually support AAP and are against equity but want to postulate absurd suggestions to make equity supporters look bad. |
And what race were the other? Why is no one answering this? |
This forum is full of fixated people. |
Do you seriously believe this or are you just posting nonsense? Whether it achieves the goal or not (and many in this the think it does not), they are trying to help the poor and underrepresented. The school board and administration are not trying to help the rich and private schools by purposefully harming the non-rich. Not even Machiavelli was that Machiavellian. |
Do you think removing homework, reducing/removing reading novels, removing discipline/punishment, and providing minimum 50% as well as skills based grading is helping or hurting a Child's education? Note: I did not say grades. I said education. |
As I said, I think they are misguided and paving a road with their good intentions. But I don't think they are evil, as you seem to. That's why I asked if you seriously believed that the school board and/or administration is purposefully harming students for some nefarious plot. And yes, you seem to. |
Oh sorry. Im DP. Yeah I don't think they are doing it on purpose for those ends. I think PP was stirring the pot a little. I do think they are doing it on purpose while knowing that it won't help in order to appear as though they are helping. |
I think there's another angle to this that gets missed a lot. One of the big complaints to any form of specialized opportunities for "advanced" kids (honors/advanced classes, AAP, G&T, anything) is that you end up a cohort of kids in the advanced track who are richer and whiter and so it's seen as a form of segregation. I think this is a reasonable concern. Segregation in housing and in educational opportunities is a huge problem in the US, and has been an ongoing problem since before Civil Rights. This is something we need to try to address.
But simplistic ideas like getting rid of AAP are missing the bigger picture. Yes, you can segregate kids within a school, and that's not good. But what's worse than that is to segregate kids into different schools. And what's worse than that is to segregate kids into completely different communities. If a diverse school in a diverse community offers an advanced option that is somewhat segregated, and then they simply remove that advanced option to avoid segregation in the name of equity, some of the parents whose kids were or would be in the advanced option may choose a different school if they have that option. They may move into a neighborhood where the gen ed educational path has more rigor, if they can afford it. Those schools and neighborhoods are likely to be richer and whiter, exacerbating the problem. Removing an AAP program that's 75% white from a school that's 75% students of color, but then causing most of those white kids (over time) to decamp to adjacent mostly white school districts, INCREASES segregation. No, you won't have the visual anymore of gen ed classes filled with students of color and the AAP classes filled with white kids. But those kids will be even more segregated, going to completely different schools and living in completely different neighborhoods. So to me, the better option is to dig deeper into causes of inequality and try to address them. If there's a test for admission, don't allow families with resources to retake or try another option or talk their kids into the program. But maybe, allow at risk kids whose scores are slightly below the cutoff to join the advanced track. Provide high-quality early education programs. Make sure that special needs are addressed for all kids. These kinds of changes are much more expensive and complex than "end AAP because of segregation" but they're a better path to equity in the long run. |
In the context of this discussion, prepping doesn’t mean teaching your kids stuff outside of school hours. It means doing things like teaching them sample cogat questions. And you very well know that, so stop deflecting. You’re embarrassing yourself. Again, AAP is NOT a gifted program. It is a program for the kids of PP and those of her ilk, masquerading as a gifted program. PP’s prepped kid doesn’t “need” special advanced instruction any more than the average kid in FCPS, because PP’s kid is NOT GIFTED. |
Asians are the majority of the high academic groups in FCPS. Why do we keep talking about whites? |
Mathcounts, AAP, Science Olympiad, TJ. It's almost all Asian. I think white people need to come to grips with the fact that their kids are not in the advanced groups within FCPS. Maybe that's why they want to tear them down. They are not represented. |
I also wonder about the demographics of places like Curie. Seems like these things are easily gameable but whites are more focused on things like travel sports. |