Here's some tips for your appeal based on reading these threads
1. Make a FOIA request to see what went wrong 2. Use thicker resume paper for your appeal. That should get their attention. Good luck to all! |
That is a generous offer, but unfortunately it could end up backfiring. If the committee suddenly began receiving letters that are very similar to each other, one child's information would not stand out from any other child's. The parents initiating an appeal really need to write very specifically about their own children. They need to describe how the child acts in learning situations and how these behaviors indicate the need to be in the AAP classroom. |
Above average for those admitted to AAP. |
Are you trying to discourage other people from appealing so your kid's file won't look mediocre in comparison? |
Of course not. I was just trying to be helpful based on comments I read on several of these threads. |
Is this real? My son is rejected with nnat of 135 and fxat 97%. GBRS 6, I am trying to appeal now. |
of course it's not real. Someone trying to stir the pot and having a good laff when you take the bait. |
With this years scores, you have to put the percentile with the nnat because a 97 % in Fxat doesn't really mean 97% since it was not age normed! The Central committee knew that a lower % Fxat for a younger child meant it could have been and would have been higher if age normed and an older child with higher % could have been lower if age was factored in. |
Rejected with NNAT 145, Fxat 78%, GBRS 6, and 3's and 4's on report card. Any chances for my dd to make it in with a strong WISC?
Plz share your thoughts. Thanks. |
Similar situation: rejected with NNAT 142 (99%), FxAT 84% (very young September kid), GBRS 8 (shocking), mostly 4s but also some 3s. The school did a horrible job with DC's screening file. They only included one measly short story (and not even a very good one) and nothing else! Thankfully, we had great letters but still, with no support from DC's school, scores and letters were clearly not enough. We just took the WISC and got a 140 (with strong VCI and PRI, but weak processing speed). What do you think of our chances? |
How strong is strong? Do you have the WISC already? If you're willing to go through an appeal, it's worth a try. The committee can't reach a different conclusion if you don't give them the chance. |
In years past, WISC 140 would have been a shoe in. Who knows this year. |
My child got accepted into the first pool with NNat score in the 99th percentile and COGAT composite of 85.
She was denied the program. Can I take the GMU testing and reapply before the end of this month? How long does it take for the scores to be released? |
You can appeal the decision based on a WISC. |
For those with high NNATs, I would think the WISC would help. The NNAT is known for having a lot of very high scores and a lot of very low scores. I would think a WISC would show that the high score is "real" not just a "false positive." Personally, I'd appeal with any WISC over 125. It's worth a shot if you think it's the right program for your child. |