Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gifted programming at all APS comes in the form of an extra worksheet. Parents take it upon themselves to supplement at home.
Private school won’t be an option for this upcoming year (not at any of the good ones anyway), but you can always apply for the year after.
OP here, I should’ve said parochial school is the other option. Paying $40k for a “good” private school isn’t in the cards anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming it is run like Mckinley, and why wouldn’t it be, they do a good job at clustering the gifted students together. There will be tons of kids who are labeled gifted. Unfortunately, about nine years ago APS decided to move from a pull out to a push in program. They claim it’s better, but most parents would disagree. I think part of the reason may be that they only staff one gifted teacher per school regardless of population size. My kid used to get pulled up for specialized instruction, but the resource teacher coming in usually means a lesson for everyone and there’s very little differentiation.
Anonymous wrote:the principal is a horrible person
Anonymous wrote:the principal is a horrible person
Anonymous wrote:the principal is a horrible person
Anonymous wrote:the principal is a horrible person
Anonymous wrote:Gifted programming at all APS comes in the form of an extra worksheet. Parents take it upon themselves to supplement at home.
Private school won’t be an option for this upcoming year (not at any of the good ones anyway), but you can always apply for the year after.