Anonymous wrote:Our child is a rising 3rd grader currently in a small private where classes are no more than 14 kids. It's a great, nurturing environment but we have concerns about the ability of the school to accelerate curriculum to meet the child's needs. Child qualified for CTY based on test scores and I expect that they would get into Level 4 AAP, though I know nothing is guaranteed. Our concern is class size - parents at our center school have said that there are 25-26 kids per class. Is that the norm, and are there any broad plans to reduce class size? Are there additional teaching resources or aides who help out in the classrooms or is it just one teacher?
Anonymous wrote:There are no plans to reduce class sizes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our child is a rising 3rd grader currently in a small private where classes are no more than 14 kids. It's a great, nurturing environment but we have concerns about the ability of the school to accelerate curriculum to meet the child's needs. Child qualified for CTY based on test scores and I expect that they would get into Level 4 AAP, though I know nothing is guaranteed. Our concern is class size - parents at our center school have said that there are 25-26 kids per class. Is that the norm, and are there any broad plans to reduce class size? Are there additional teaching resources or aides who help out in the classrooms or is it just one teacher?
This is ENTIRELY dependent on the school and the amount of students allocated to the LIV. With the roll-out of LLIV, and potential students staying in their local schools, the IV enrollment at our center is decreasing. We were lucky that we had enough to field 2 classes of 17-19 students apiece (started at 17, has grown a bit as new students enroll mid-year). We were just above the maximum for 1 class. Even year-to-year this is very sporadic. Either way, there will be only 1 teacher normally.
I would say that non-centers will have a more evenly spread count of students, as they can fill in the class with high performing non IV students; Centers typically do not, but may also have feed-ins for math for some instances.
Anonymous wrote:Our child is a rising 3rd grader currently in a small private where classes are no more than 14 kids. It's a great, nurturing environment but we have concerns about the ability of the school to accelerate curriculum to meet the child's needs. Child qualified for CTY based on test scores and I expect that they would get into Level 4 AAP, though I know nothing is guaranteed. Our concern is class size - parents at our center school have said that there are 25-26 kids per class. Is that the norm, and are there any broad plans to reduce class size? Are there additional teaching resources or aides who help out in the classrooms or is it just one teacher?
Anonymous wrote:Our child is a rising 3rd grader currently in a small private where classes are no more than 14 kids. It's a great, nurturing environment but we have concerns about the ability of the school to accelerate curriculum to meet the child's needs. Child qualified for CTY based on test scores and I expect that they would get into Level 4 AAP, though I know nothing is guaranteed. Our concern is class size - parents at our center school have said that there are 25-26 kids per class. Is that the norm, and are there any broad plans to reduce class size? Are there additional teaching resources or aides who help out in the classrooms or is it just one teacher?