Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Currently in 3rd grade. No application needed -- centrally reviewed. Locally-normed 85th percentile (see exception, below) on Winter MAP-R (window currently open). (Fall, or best of Fall and last Spring, now for math, is used in 5th grade for criteria-based MS magnets.) Grades of A in 2nd marking period (current one) for Writing and Social Studies. 2nd marking period reading level marked as on or above ("ABV"). All criteria must be met.
Locally normed 85th %ile means that they take all the elementaries and determine their FARMS-rate tranche -- 5 of those from low-FARMS to high-FARMS -- determine the MAP RIT score that was met or exceeded by the top 15% of scorers from the population of those schools, and then let all such scorers from those schools through that particular criterion-gate (still need the grades, etc.). That changes from year to year. For low-FARMS schools, that could end up being a national 95th %ile or higher, as those schools tend to have a large proportion of high scorers. Local norming is seen as a best practice to make comparisons across dissimilar populations.
For those receiving services (FARMS, EML, 504, IEP) the criterion becomes a locally-normed 70th %ile.
I'm not sure I understand what all of this means...but my DC doesn't meet all the criteria. I guess the message doesn't mean that you qualify for the lottery but just that my child will be reviewed?
Anonymous wrote:Currently in 3rd grade. No application needed -- centrally reviewed. Locally-normed 85th percentile (see exception, below) on Winter MAP-R (window currently open). (Fall, or best of Fall and last Spring, now for math, is used in 5th grade for criteria-based MS magnets.) Grades of A in 2nd marking period (current one) for Writing and Social Studies. 2nd marking period reading level marked as on or above ("ABV"). All criteria must be met.
Locally normed 85th %ile means that they take all the elementaries and determine their FARMS-rate tranche -- 5 of those from low-FARMS to high-FARMS -- determine the MAP RIT score that was met or exceeded by the top 15% of scorers from the population of those schools, and then let all such scorers from those schools through that particular criterion-gate (still need the grades, etc.). That changes from year to year. For low-FARMS schools, that could end up being a national 95th %ile or higher, as those schools tend to have a large proportion of high scorers. Local norming is seen as a best practice to make comparisons across dissimilar populations.
For those receiving services (FARMS, EML, 504, IEP) the criterion becomes a locally-normed 70th %ile.
Anonymous wrote:Currently in 3rd grade. No application needed -- centrally reviewed. Locally-normed 85th percentile (see exception, below) on Winter MAP-R (window currently open). (Fall, or best of Fall and last Spring, now for math, is used in 5th grade for criteria-based MS magnets.) Grades of A in 2nd marking period (current one) for Writing and Social Studies. 2nd marking period reading level marked as on or above ("ABV"). All criteria must be met.
Locally normed 85th %ile means that they take all the elementaries and determine their FARMS-rate tranche -- 5 of those from low-FARMS to high-FARMS -- determine the MAP RIT score that was met or exceeded by the top 15% of scorers from the population of those schools, and then let all such scorers from those schools through that particular criterion-gate (still need the grades, etc.). That changes from year to year. For low-FARMS schools, that could end up being a national 95th %ile or higher, as those schools tend to have a large proportion of high scorers. Local norming is seen as a best practice to make comparisons across dissimilar populations.
For those receiving services (FARMS, EML, 504, IEP) the criterion becomes a locally-normed 70th %ile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are waitlisted for CES (qualify for the pool but don't get a spot), you are guaranteed the Enriched Literacy Curriculum at your local school, which is based on CES curriculum. The only schools that don't have ELC are the one-way and two-way immersion programs.
My son hasn't applied to anything yet. . .
Anonymous wrote:Thanks to pp who said it was on remind. I did get it for my thrid grader and was also denied access to the link.
Anonymous wrote:If you are waitlisted for CES (qualify for the pool but don't get a spot), you are guaranteed the Enriched Literacy Curriculum at your local school, which is based on CES curriculum. The only schools that don't have ELC are the one-way and two-way immersion programs.