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Advanced Academic Programs (AAP)
Reply to "Another perspective on “prepping” from a lower income mom"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Guidance on retesting: https://support.pearson.com/usclinical/s/article/Clinical-Customer-Support-Test-Retest-Minimum-Time-Advice Note that prepping is not taking the test over and over to exhaust the bank of questions. Prepping is taking “like” tests based on the interpretation of a third party on what concepts and format are relevant. [/quote] Right. This applies to enrolling at testing sites that “prep” AND going through practice tests w/ parents to understand why the right answer is correct and learning to apply that concept to other similar questions. [b]It’s not how their brain actually interprets the question to arrive at the answer un-coached. That’s what this test is intended to show[/b]. [/quote] So now you’re an expert on how brain interprets questions! [/quote] No, I have a basic understanding of how aptitude tests work, which quite a number of you are clearly lacking. [/quote] It’s very basic, that’s for sure! Although you claim to know how brain interprets questions, the intent of the test, the retesting validity and so on. I’m wondering what your credentials are that make your expertise so relevant. Prepping does increase the scores, some of it from being familiar with the format, some from actually having a better understanding of the concept through learning. None constitute cheating. Take for example sorting based on a characteristic, you seem to be fine if this is learned at home using legos, but it’s a big no-no if the student explores sorting through a paid third party service that may be designed to match typical wisc sorting questions. [/quote] You are free to cheat as much as your conscience allows. There's no honor system for the Cogat test. Which is why FCPS ignores high scores.[/quote] I don't plan to take a cogat test any time soon. Feel free to justify for yourself that any high score is the direct result of cheating, because, of course, that's the only way anyone can score higher than your child.[/quote] I’m a different poster. Stop being obtuse. You prepped your kid for the test bc you knew it would artificially raise their score, which is the boost you clearly felt they needed to get in, otherwise you wouldn’t have done it. I didn’t prep my kid bc I knew they didn’t need to cheat to get in. I also don’t know or care what anyone else’s kid scored compared to mine. I do care that ppl are muddying the entire selection process by artificially raising scores through prep. [/quote] Also a new poster, but I think most people do it because they know 90% of the other parents are so it's the only way their kid will have a fair shake. [/quote] It’s not the only way for 90% of the kids to get a fair shot. It’s mostly the average kids with pushy parents that have difficulty qualifying. My estimate is the bottom quartile of the pool with parents chasing status and validation. Many deserving kids get in without breaking a sweat. The true 95 percentile kid will get in with minimal effort, the 80-85 percentile kid will need to be dragged across the finish line through prepping, appeals, recommendations etc.[/quote] DP. Many 98th percentile+ kids get in without breaking a sweat. But some don't, which makes people with gifted kids worried that their kid may not get a random rejection or may have an off day on the testing day. So, they may prep to nudge that score a little higher. For the kids in the 85th-95th percentile band, the kids who get accepted are indistinguishable from the ones who don't get in, and getting accepted is kind of a crapshoot. It's understandable that parents want to do whatever they can to have their child on the AAP side of that fairly arbitrary line when their child is every bit as capable as many of the kids who get accepted into AAP and when the program takes nearly 20% of the FCPS population. [/quote] I think that's why the vast majority spend tens of thousands on prep these days. Most just aren't up to the task and it changes the playing field so that even kids that are naturally 95%+ can't compete without it.[/quote] This is such fantasy-based trolling.[/quote]
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