Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 2nd grade. The kid is pretty smart, not genius level or anything, but he gets by. He’s incredibly creative, though, so I thought he would be a good fit for AAP. So, like all the parents in my neighborhood, I bought a couple of books over the summer and had him practice for 20 minutes a day until the test. I got the results—105 NV, 119 Q, 135 V. My kid has never been good at math or special reasoning, but I figured with enough prep he would figure it out. Well, he didn’t. He told me he could study 24 hours a day and still won’t be able to flip an image in his head. How do parents prep their kids to overcome an inmate lack of aptitude in math or spatial reasoning?
Anonymous wrote:We did similar prep as OP for COGAT after being shocked by conflicting 118 NNAT and 136 WISC (both unprepped).
I really don't think prep gets you much more than 5 or 10 pts. DC got 136 COGAT, literally the exact same score as a completely unprepped WISC. His nonverbal COGAT section though, was 94th percentile after prepping, had been 88th or so unprepped on both NNAT and WISC sections for spatial puzzles etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 2nd grade. The kid is pretty smart, not genius level or anything, but he gets by. He’s incredibly creative, though, so I thought he would be a good fit for AAP. So, like all the parents in my neighborhood, I bought a couple of books over the summer and had him practice for 20 minutes a day until the test. I got the results—105 NV, 119 Q, 135 V. My kid has never been good at math or special reasoning, but I figured with enough prep he would figure it out. Well, he didn’t. He told me he could study 24 hours a day and still won’t be able to flip an image in his head. How do parents prep their kids to overcome an inmate lack of aptitude in math or spatial reasoning?
You can't. Sorry.
Yeah, you can only do so much for the spatial stuff. Some people’s brains just don’t work that way (like me—ha!). For the math part, better to send them to Kumon or some similar-type place than have them just do practice tests. They need supplemental math instruction.
No they don’t. Go away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 2nd grade. The kid is pretty smart, not genius level or anything, but he gets by. He’s incredibly creative, though, so I thought he would be a good fit for AAP. So, like all the parents in my neighborhood, I bought a couple of books over the summer and had him practice for 20 minutes a day until the test. I got the results—105 NV, 119 Q, 135 V. My kid has never been good at math or special reasoning, but I figured with enough prep he would figure it out. Well, he didn’t. He told me he could study 24 hours a day and still won’t be able to flip an image in his head. How do parents prep their kids to overcome an inmate lack of aptitude in math or spatial reasoning?
You can't. Sorry.
Yeah, you can only do so much for the spatial stuff. Some people’s brains just don’t work that way (like me—ha!). For the math part, better to send them to Kumon or some similar-type place than have them just do practice tests. They need supplemental math instruction.
No they don’t. Go away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what’s the point of the test prep industry? Someone here (jokingly?) said they prepped their kid from 105 to 155…how?
test prep is for kids who have innate ability but are bad at taking tests. That is the part you can prep. If the innate ability isn't there, not a lot you can do, other than wait. Sometimes the brain just develops. but I'm guessing you are on a time constraint?
It's also for compliant bright kids who can bump from 120 to 150. On paper, it's hard to distinguish between kid A who got 150 composite and kid b who only got 136 composite. Both are 99th percentile. But did one of them prep? Or both? Or neither?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what’s the point of the test prep industry? Someone here (jokingly?) said they prepped their kid from 105 to 155…how?
test prep is for kids who have innate ability but are bad at taking tests. That is the part you can prep. If the innate ability isn't there, not a lot you can do, other than wait. Sometimes the brain just develops. but I'm guessing you are on a time constraint?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 2nd grade. The kid is pretty smart, not genius level or anything, but he gets by. He’s incredibly creative, though, so I thought he would be a good fit for AAP. So, like all the parents in my neighborhood, I bought a couple of books over the summer and had him practice for 20 minutes a day until the test. I got the results—105 NV, 119 Q, 135 V. My kid has never been good at math or special reasoning, but I figured with enough prep he would figure it out. Well, he didn’t. He told me he could study 24 hours a day and still won’t be able to flip an image in his head. How do parents prep their kids to overcome an inmate lack of aptitude in math or spatial reasoning?
You can't. Sorry.
Yeah, you can only do so much for the spatial stuff. Some people’s brains just don’t work that way (like me—ha!). For the math part, better to send them to Kumon or some similar-type place than have them just do practice tests. They need supplemental math instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 2nd grade. The kid is pretty smart, not genius level or anything, but he gets by. He’s incredibly creative, though, so I thought he would be a good fit for AAP. So, like all the parents in my neighborhood, I bought a couple of books over the summer and had him practice for 20 minutes a day until the test. I got the results—105 NV, 119 Q, 135 V. My kid has never been good at math or special reasoning, but I figured with enough prep he would figure it out. Well, he didn’t. He told me he could study 24 hours a day and still won’t be able to flip an image in his head. How do parents prep their kids to overcome an inmate lack of aptitude in math or spatial reasoning?
You can't. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:So what’s the point of the test prep industry? Someone here (jokingly?) said they prepped their kid from 105 to 155…how?
Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 2nd grade. The kid is pretty smart, not genius level or anything, but he gets by. He’s incredibly creative, though, so I thought he would be a good fit for AAP. So, like all the parents in my neighborhood, I bought a couple of books over the summer and had him practice for 20 minutes a day until the test. I got the results—105 NV, 119 Q, 135 V. My kid has never been good at math or special reasoning, but I figured with enough prep he would figure it out. Well, he didn’t. He told me he could study 24 hours a day and still won’t be able to flip an image in his head. How do parents prep their kids to overcome an inmate lack of aptitude in math or spatial reasoning?