Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What will this look like? What is the timeline?
I know at our school far less kids are getting into the AAP program already. We are at a high SES school and half the kids used to get into AAP. Now only about 1/4 of the kids get into AAP.
I have a great idea. We can select up to top 10% of each elementary school in the county to participate in the AAP. This way, we give opportunities to all students and not just the wealthy ones. We can increase black and Hispanic students to twice the current level. On top of this, reserve 20% of all the spots for black/Hispanic students to further increase black/Hispanic students and FARMS students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Local level iv doesn’t serve the kids who the original center gt program was designed for. They have special needs. FCPS has moved to dilute the program through local programs. They haven’t said they are killing aap but they’re doing it this way.
Several board members consistently rail against serving the needs of these students - Omeish, Andersen, meren and gamarra. Some even dislike young scholars. They only want to serve certain students based on their demographics.
The number of kids that are truly gifted is so low that centers would not be needed or only a few centers with a class.
And that’s what fcps used to have but then they shifted to aap serving much larger numbers (and generating the insane obsession by some parents to “get their kid in”) that wasn’t actually challenging enough to serve the original group of kids.
Anonymous wrote:What will this look like? What is the timeline?
I know at our school far less kids are getting into the AAP program already. We are at a high SES school and half the kids used to get into AAP. Now only about 1/4 of the kids get into AAP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Local level iv doesn’t serve the kids who the original center gt program was designed for. They have special needs. FCPS has moved to dilute the program through local programs. They haven’t said they are killing aap but they’re doing it this way.
Several board members consistently rail against serving the needs of these students - Omeish, Andersen, meren and gamarra. Some even dislike young scholars. They only want to serve certain students based on their demographics.
The number of kids that are truly gifted is so low that centers would not be needed or only a few centers with a class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Local level iv doesn’t serve the kids who the original center gt program was designed for. They have special needs. FCPS has moved to dilute the program through local programs. They haven’t said they are killing aap but they’re doing it this way.
Several board members consistently rail against serving the needs of these students - Omeish, Andersen, meren and gamarra. Some even dislike young scholars. They only want to serve certain students based on their demographics.
The number of kids that are truly gifted is so low that centers would not be needed or only a few centers with a class.
Anonymous wrote:Local level iv doesn’t serve the kids who the original center gt program was designed for. They have special needs. FCPS has moved to dilute the program through local programs. They haven’t said they are killing aap but they’re doing it this way.
Several board members consistently rail against serving the needs of these students - Omeish, Andersen, meren and gamarra. Some even dislike young scholars. They only want to serve certain students based on their demographics.
Anonymous wrote:Local level iv doesn’t serve the kids who the original center gt program was designed for. They have special needs. FCPS has moved to dilute the program through local programs. They haven’t said they are killing aap but they’re doing it this way.
Several board members consistently rail against serving the needs of these students - Omeish, Andersen, meren and gamarra. Some even dislike young scholars. They only want to serve certain students based on their demographics.
Anonymous wrote:What will this look like? What is the timeline?
I know at our school far less kids are getting into the AAP program already. We are at a high SES school and half the kids used to get into AAP. Now only about 1/4 of the kids get into AAP.