Anonymous wrote:The main differentiator is advanced math. Hopefully your school starts it in 3rd, and your kid’s math grades and interest in math are high and they are accepted.
If your school doesn’t start advanced math until 5th, now is the time to start working with the kid on math so hopefully they can qualify in 5th. I suspect that there are more “hard qualifiers” and objective criteria in 5th grade advanced math schools. Probably pass advanced on the 3rd and 4th grade math SOL’s + high math grades and 90th%+ IReady. 3rd grade advanced math seems a little fuzzier without the SOL’s to fall back on.
I have a kid in advanced math (3rd grade) in a LLIV school and, honestly, with Benchmark as the new LA curriculum, I’m not sure what the difference is anymore in anything other than math. Of course, you’d probably have more of a difference at a center. But my kid only qualified for advanced math and it’s been fine. He is already in advanced math for 4th grade, got pass advanced on his 3rd grade math SOL, I Ready has been 95th%+ for math in all of 2nd and 3rd grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t find our school to be helpful at all. I really don’t know if you have to buddy up with the principal or be in the PTO to have influence. I work full time and it was hard to do that. We never got contacted about principal placement. I only learned about it from this forum. I figured if a kid really stands and was in pool and got rejected, there are grounds to ask for the principal to help. But I don’t think they proactively reach out. So you should do that soon as classes are being determined now for next year.
I am a principal. Asking to be placed in an AAP class would be the fastest way to ensure your kid is not getting into that class. The last thing I would want is for anyone to think is that they have to be in the PTO or “buddy up” to me to get special favors. If word got out that all you had to do was bug the principal with that request, I’d lose all credibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t find our school to be helpful at all. I really don’t know if you have to buddy up with the principal or be in the PTO to have influence. I work full time and it was hard to do that. We never got contacted about principal placement. I only learned about it from this forum. I figured if a kid really stands and was in pool and got rejected, there are grounds to ask for the principal to help. But I don’t think they proactively reach out. So you should do that soon as classes are being determined now for next year.
I am a principal. Asking to be placed in an AAP class would be the fastest way to ensure your kid is not getting into that class. The last thing I would want is for anyone to think is that they have to be in the PTO or “buddy up” to me to get special favors. If word got out that all you had to do was bug the principal with that request, I’d lose all credibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t find our school to be helpful at all. I really don’t know if you have to buddy up with the principal or be in the PTO to have influence. I work full time and it was hard to do that. We never got contacted about principal placement. I only learned about it from this forum. I figured if a kid really stands and was in pool and got rejected, there are grounds to ask for the principal to help. But I don’t think they proactively reach out. So you should do that soon as classes are being determined now for next year.
I am a principal. Asking to be placed in an AAP class would be the fastest way to ensure your kid is not getting into that class. The last thing I would want is for anyone to think is that they have to be in the PTO or “buddy up” to me to get special favors. If word got out that all you had to do was bug the principal with that request, I’d lose all credibility.
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t find our school to be helpful at all. I really don’t know if you have to buddy up with the principal or be in the PTO to have influence. I work full time and it was hard to do that. We never got contacted about principal placement. I only learned about it from this forum. I figured if a kid really stands and was in pool and got rejected, there are grounds to ask for the principal to help. But I don’t think they proactively reach out. So you should do that soon as classes are being determined now for next year.
Anonymous wrote:Curious how different schools handle “full time aap rejected” kids. Does the school reach out and offer principal placement? Have they reached out yet?
Do we as parents need to do anything or just wait for part time / local principal placement? Would the process of applying to full time be enough to show them we have interest in our child for these programs?
Also interested if you’re considering private school options and your reasoning for that.
Anonymous wrote:Our school doesn't have local full time or advanced math until 5th - so, there's nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Our school doesn't have local full time or advanced math until 5th - so, there's nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Curious how different schools handle “full time aap rejected” kids. Does the school reach out and offer principal placement? Have they reached out yet?
Do we as parents need to do anything or just wait for part time / local principal placement? Would the process of applying to full time be enough to show them we have interest in our child for these programs?
Also interested if you’re considering private school options and your reasoning for that.