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Advanced Academic Programs (AAP)
Reply to "Level IV AAP Courses at Cooper MS Next School Year?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This was my question below. Not a gripe or jealousy over AAP eligibility. I have two children in AAP - it's a good program, but there's more to life and what makes a child a well-rounded, intelligent contributing member of society. My one who is not Level IV (he was Level III, ridiculous labels!) successfully participated in "local level IV" throughout ES and understandably wonders now why he can't continue with "local level IV," as he is not attending a center. It's not a matter of paying for extra field trips or asking to participate in additional projects, as other posters mention...principal made clear that if one is not centrally eligible for AAP, no matter how long or well they did as a Level IV principal designee, they are flat out barred from participating in the program at Cooper. Of course they can still do Honors, but the AAP kids are being kept in their own bubble for the most part, as they would in a center. I gather it had to be done this way to attract the Level IV students to Cooper rather than them leaving for Kilmer or Longfellow centers. Apparently, many of those parents would not have placed their kids at Cooper if there had not been a separate and exclusive Level IV program. Just not sure it is a legitimate application of local level IV when a school is not a center. "Has anyone else heard of or experienced this at Cooper? How is this permissible, if Cooper is not a center? At best, they can arguably be running a "local level IV" program, but if that's the case, how can they restrict students who were local level IV students at the elementary level from participating?" [/quote] +100 on everything you said. There is so much more to life than being in AAP and I think the schools are doing a disservice to all kids by keeping AAP kids in this silly bubble. Many non-AAP kids (how I hate these labels) are fully capable of being in AAP classes and shouldn't be excluded from them simply because some parents insist on exclusivity for their snowflakes. And yes, I also have a child in AAP and another who is Gen Ed. I see no reason for this constant segregation. [/quote] Let's say it agin. Not all schools are Colvin Run. [/quote]
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