Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you are level four and don't pass an SOL, do you have to leave the program?
No. There’s no scenario where a student is kicked out of AAP once found eligible.
Interesting, the AART at my school said that they can kick you out if you fail an SOL. I thought this was BS, and wanted to make sure. We are not a center school.
Is the child committed placed in Level IV or Principal placed in the LLIV class? If the latter, there are no guarantees of keeping the seat and they can be moved for any reason.
Anonymous wrote:
If you are level four and don't pass an SOL, do you have to leave the program?
No. There’s no scenario where a student is kicked out of AAP once found eligible.
Interesting, the AART at my school said that they can kick you out if you fail an SOL. I thought this was BS, and wanted to make sure. We are not a center school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know of kids in AAP that do not score pass advanced on their SOLs so I am assuming that those kids are not scoring in the 90th percentile on the iReady.
If you are level four and don't pass an SOL, do you have to leave the program?
Anonymous wrote:I know of kids in AAP that do not score pass advanced on their SOLs so I am assuming that those kids are not scoring in the 90th percentile on the iReady.
Anonymous wrote:So the 20 percent of kids who are in AAP, or whatever percent it is, are nearly always scoring above the95th plus percentile of every iready?
That seems statistically unlikely
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For students already in the level four program, is it unusual to see i-Ready scores below the 80 and 90th percentile?
For my sample of 2, yes, that would be unusual.
Anonymous wrote:For students already in the level four program, is it unusual to see i-Ready scores below the 80 and 90th percentile?