Clearly their kid wasn't an outlier as far as MCPS was concerned or they'd be in the program. More likely they're bright but one of many similar kids at a fine middle school. I'm told the enriched class are wonderful. |
This is simply not true. They looked at the non-CES kids at CES schools as their own separate elementary requiring representation. Your child may still have scored higher than everyone in the CES for that one test (Map-M) but you don't know if your child outscored all the other CES kids overall factoring in Cogat. You sound kind of unhinged insisting this is the case. |
I completely disagree. The new process is designed to pick up diverse group of kids (using the broadest definition which also includes gender and geographic diversity) who are academically strong who would benefit from a different approach to education. It picked up a lot of kids who might have been left out in the past. Success. It is failing a lot of kids who may need this type of education, and may be stronger academically than the ones who were picked. I support universal screening. There were a lot of disadvantages to the old application process but it did account for one thing that the process today does not account for which is motivation and parents knowing if their kid needs something else. My child has really enjoyed the magnet programs but I know there are kids at the neighborhood school who might "need" it more. In the old system they would have applied and teachers would have recommended them as needing more. That's been taken out of the equation. Before you jump on me about bias in teacher recommendations, I'm well aware. That system was not perfect either but I am just acknowledging there are some kids who actually need these programs who are not able to access them. |
Also you are really condescending. Are you like this in real life? |
My DC doesn't even know her own Cogat scores. Never told her and I certainly never told any other parents or kids. She was at a CES. That other PP who claims to know everything is full of BS. Kids do not share scores like that. Map, yes. Cogat, no. |
Yes he was. He’s in the program. |
Agree with you. I wasn’t talking about MAP or cogat just that it’s clear to staff and kids who the strongest are in some subjects. I’ve also been told by teachers how my kid compares. Perhaps this isn’t usual but when a teacher tells you that your kids scores are the highest in the school or that your child is an outlier not just in their class but the school you tend to assume they are telling the truth. Maybe they weren’t but it wasn’t a surprise and I’m not sure why they would lie. (Btw there are multiple people responding sometimes to posts that are in response to me. This is all getting a little confusing.) |
Our middle school only has enrichment in math. Not sure what you are talking about as every school offered different things. Our elementary offered no enrichment beyond impacted math. |
You realize that's very common for kids who are left behind at their schools and doing well. MAP and Cognat are helpful vs. teachers who may or may not get to know the kids/show an interest. We had really bad teachers in 4th and 5th grade was a nightmare between multiple long term subs and a teacher who didn't care when they came back. |
Actually they don't. We only had two kids go. There were about 6 kids who should have gone. There was no enrichment for the other kids at school. |
What’s very common? My kid wasn’t “left behind”. There was a CES in his school. |
Are you replying to a different question?? |
How can it possibly be very common for multiple kids to have scored the highest in a school? Only one kid can do that. |
I don't think those scores take her out of the pool, but she would need to do VERY well on the cogat screener. MAP and cogat measure different things, according to MCPS (and the test makers). MAP measures exposure to concepts, so a child in compacted math will do better than an equally intelligent child who is in Math 5, because the first child has been exposed to higher level concepts. The cogat, on the other hand, is meant to measure aptitude. This isn't a perfect system, obviously. Kids who have not been exposed to higher level math in school can seek it out in other contexts, and there's a whole industry devoted to cogat test prep. |
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^^ Oh, to complete my thought here. Sorry.
I don't think a medium-high but not sky-high MAP score is the death knell for middle school admissions because MCPS is aware that systemic barriers can keep an intelligent kid from having access to subject matter that is beyond grade level. Like, if no one ever teaches you that A= pi x radius squared, you aren't going to know it so will get that question wrong. |