Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The student is definitely attending the multi variable calc class at McLean, he then goes back to his normal ES.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.
That kid must have transferred into FCPS from elsewhere. FCPS absolutely does not allow any kid, no matter how gifted, to progress this quickly.
Sure. But FCPS absolutely does not accelerate kids to this level. The kid likely took Algebra I in like 1st grade in some other school setting, and then transferred into FCPS later. FCPS will honor credit and placement from other schools, but Gatehouse is flat out unwilling to jump a kid up more than 2 or 3 years in math, even if the kid is testing at the ceiling of every available test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.
That kid must have transferred into FCPS from elsewhere. FCPS absolutely does not allow any kid, no matter how gifted, to progress this quickly.
She responded to the same essay prompts as everyone else. I mean her parents couldn't take the test for her.
Anonymous wrote:The student is definitely attending the multi variable calc class at McLean, he then goes back to his normal ES.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.
That kid must have transferred into FCPS from elsewhere. FCPS absolutely does not allow any kid, no matter how gifted, to progress this quickly.
The student is definitely attending the multi variable calc class at McLean, he then goes back to his normal ES.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.
That kid must have transferred into FCPS from elsewhere. FCPS absolutely does not allow any kid, no matter how gifted, to progress this quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.
That kid must have transferred into FCPS from elsewhere. FCPS absolutely does not allow any kid, no matter how gifted, to progress this quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.
And also proof that parents can ruin a childhood by being insane.
Anonymous wrote:It got her on TV. I think they were hoping for a bigger payoff.
Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.
Anonymous wrote:There is a different 10 year-old enrolled in multi variable calculus at McLean HS with all the HS seniors.
These students are proof of why there must be grouping by academic ability, instead of the absurd inclusion and equity-approaches pushed by Gatehouse and Reid.