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Advanced Academic Programs (AAP)
Reply to "Does AAP create unhelpful elitism and separation?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] Yes, and the reasoning is to provide a cohort to the students. If it's just some kids going to advanced math, that's not a cohort, or at least not a cohort as is currently being provided. All those posters who say that AAP was great socially for their child because they found their people, that's a cohort. You may be correct that cohorts provide no value to any gifted student and that schools shouldn't provide that. That's what you're arguing for. [/quote] Now we're back to the elitism argument. If the argument is that kids "need AAP" to find their cohort, that's saying that AAP kids and non-AAP kids are not peers. It's pretty elitist to feel as if your child cannot possibly find peers among the gen ed kids, and it's also elitist to feel as if a middle-of-the-road AAP kid is different at all from a bright gen ed kid who missed the cut. [/quote]
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