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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Gifted in DCPS"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]NP here. I have a child in PK3 whose teachers are working with her a grade or two ahead on some things. What is the CTY program?[/quote] Is this a joke?[/quote] Another new poster, my PK4 kid is several grade levels ahead of his peers (reading at 3rd/4th grade level). It happens. And his teachers work with him on it. And, yes, PK3 and PK4 are GRADES in public schools in the district.[/quote] Thank you. Yes, this is a DC public schools forum and PK3 is a grade in DC public schools. [/quote] I love it. A 36-month-old can now be in a grade. With a curriculum. And yes, I know that really is the case in dcps but I think it's stupid. -- mom of talented 5th grader who was pooping his pants occasionally at age 3, squeezing play dough, building free-form towers and so on. It's so weird to me that a dc resident now has to PAY serious cash to get that kind of developmentally appropriate nursery school experience in a private preschool. "I want my kid to fingerpaint all day, so that means tuition!" [/quote] Your post is so myopic I don't even know where to begin.[/quote] Well, why don't you try anyway? And before you castigate the poster for not understanding that universal pk3 was implemented to boost the odds for poor District residents in lieu of HeadStart ..... keep in my that the pk3 is, [u]in practice[/u], used as free childcare by huge swaths of DC residents EOTP but west of the river, people who [i]could[/i] afford preschool (because they used to pay for it, natch) and whose kids aren't the least bit disadvantaged. It's a spillover bennie for a big-ass chunk of middle-class DC parents. Which is fine, but their kids don't require intensive academics and would be better served by a FULL DAY of creative play. So says child development research. [/quote]
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