Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except that it means that your child is in the top 10 percent of their 2nd grade class and probably does require the level of differentiation provided by AAP Level VI. Come on. In pool = in.
Require??? 😂 You’re funny. The level of delusion here is comical. Your kid is bright and will be fine in gen ed. There’s maybe a tiny, tiny fraction of kids who are outliers and require something different.
Anonymous wrote:Except that it means that your child is in the top 10 percent of their 2nd grade class and probably does require the level of differentiation provided by AAP Level VI. Come on. In pool = in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except that it means that your child is in the top 10 percent of their 2nd grade class and probably does require the level of differentiation provided by AAP Level VI. Come on. In pool = in.
Nope, it's totally unfair that a kid at a high SES school that scores significantly better than the top 10% at another school doesn't get into the program.
+1000
And this is why they will eventually alter AAP and simply have LLIV at all schools, no centers or need for a committee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except that it means that your child is in the top 10 percent of their 2nd grade class and probably does require the level of differentiation provided by AAP Level VI. Come on. In pool = in.
Nope, it's totally unfair that a kid at a high SES school that scores significantly better than the top 10% at another school doesn't get into the program.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Except that it means that your child is in the top 10 percent of their 2nd grade class and probably does require the level of differentiation provided by AAP Level VI. Come on. In pool = in.
Nope, it's totally unfair that a kid at a high SES school that scores significantly better than the top 10% at another school doesn't get into the program.
Anonymous wrote:Except that it means that your child is in the top 10 percent of their 2nd grade class and probably does require the level of differentiation provided by AAP Level VI. Come on. In pool = in.
Anonymous wrote:
If your kid got in the APP pool by the NNAT3 score (1 grade), cogat starts from 2 grade.. do you have their score?