Anonymous wrote:hat makes a lot of sense. Is there anything you can share about the round 2 experience?
Anonymous wrote:We didn’t prep my son at all before the first-round assessment. Back then, we didn’t know anyone attending the school and were new to the neighborhood. We only applied because a realtor friend suggested it—we didn’t even know the school existed, as we didn’t grow up here. It never really crossed our minds to do any extra prep for round one, especially after reading on the school’s webpage that prepping was strongly discouraged.
Personally, I’m in favor of no-prepping. Prepping doesn’t guarantee a pass and might make a no-pass decision feel even more bitter. But that’s just my perspective. Looking back, I feel the best decision I made was not trying to dig up any additional info or intel about the test beyond what the school shared on their website. We approached both rounds of assessments with almost no expectations, and honestly, I think that was better for my sanity anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HCES discourages test prep. In the past parents were told that if it was obvious that a child had received prep that they would be disqualified. However, that doesn't stop parents from having their child assessed and then using the results to prep their child for the HCES test. A family from our nursery school did that and their child got in. I think it's unethical, but that's me. That said, now that the DOE ruined G&T by eliminating the G&T test, HCES is the only free school that screens for K. It's unfair that HCES still screens while the DOE no longer does for all intents and purposes. I hope this situation will be rectified one of these days.
What does that mean, the parents had the child assessed? Like they went to a tester ahead of time and had the child do the Stanford Binet?
Anonymous wrote:HCES discourages test prep. In the past parents were told that if it was obvious that a child had received prep that they would be disqualified. However, that doesn't stop parents from having their child assessed and then using the results to prep their child for the HCES test. A family from our nursery school did that and their child got in. I think it's unethical, but that's me. That said, now that the DOE ruined G&T by eliminating the G&T test, HCES is the only free school that screens for K. It's unfair that HCES still screens while the DOE no longer does for all intents and purposes. I hope this situation will be rectified one of these days.
Anonymous wrote:No prep for Hunter elementary. If your child is actually gifted they don't need prep! Hunter (high school) parent.
Anonymous wrote:The way I saw a consultant put it, she knew no one who got in without doing some prep. There are ways to do prep that isn't formal or systematic- buy the books, slip them in to other play- all I can tell you is, it worked for us.