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Advanced Academic Programs (AAP)
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP, I have a similar story. My DD was told by some other girls on the bus that they were all smart and she wasn't, because they all got into AAP and she didn't. The sad part about all of this is that I know the other kids were parent referrals, and I didn't understand enough about AAP to refer my kid with a 130 CogAT composite (at a Title I school), meaning that my "not smart" DD had higher test scores than the "smart" girls who were bullying her. Then, she got rejected when we applied in 3rd, despite having a nearly perfect GBRS to go along with the 130 CogAT, as well as being above grade level in both reading and math. Across the next 8 years, my kid got pass advanced on every SOL with perfect scores on most of them, a 98th percentile IAAT, straight As, a 5 on an AP test taken in 9th grade, and another 4 APs in 10th. She also flew through the math and completed AP Calc in 10th grade. The AAP label is pretty meaningless, and kids will do fine even without it. My DD was pretty salty about the whole thing, though, and it took quite a bit of time for her to regain her confidence after FCPS and her peers deemed her as "not smart." [/quote] Yep kids can be mean. And kids move at their own pace. Luckily, AAP is there to provide supports for kids to need it sooner than later. And luckily AP classes are available for kids who need it later.[/quote] Wow. That's what you got out of it? You read that as my kid with a 97th percentile CogAT, above grade level in everything, and with a perfect GBRS "needed it later," and the kids with lower scores all around who weren't even in the advanced math group or highest reading group "needed it sooner." :shock: The bigger issue is that aside from the very top kids who are above and beyond, AAP draws a pretty arbitrary line between the above average kids who get the smart label and the above average kids who don't. It's unfortunate that one group of moderately advanced kids with moderately bright test scores will be mean to peers who are completely indistinguishable from them and may even be smarter than they are, simply because FCPS created this huge gulf between the two groups. And then the very top kids who are above and beyond don't get the supports they need because the program has been so watered down by the above average kids in AAP. [/quote]
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