Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in DC and are considering a move to Arlington before my eldest starts 6th next year. I am trying to get a better sense of how children who move into APS in middle school can be identified as gifted. The criteria on the website seem rather vague. In other areas of the country, the criteria are very specific -- i.e., if your child achieves X percentile on Y nationally normed test, the child would be immediately placed in gifted upon starting school. This doesn't seem to be the case for APS -- instead it seems kind of squishy and like my child would be in a general classroom for some time while we waited for this subjective process to play out. Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated!
If this is your thinking, move to Mclean
But why though? What was it about what I wrote that makes you say that? I'm at the early end of the learning curve here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in DC and are considering a move to Arlington before my eldest starts 6th next year. I am trying to get a better sense of how children who move into APS in middle school can be identified as gifted. The criteria on the website seem rather vague. In other areas of the country, the criteria are very specific -- i.e., if your child achieves X percentile on Y nationally normed test, the child would be immediately placed in gifted upon starting school. This doesn't seem to be the case for APS -- instead it seems kind of squishy and like my child would be in a general classroom for some time while we waited for this subjective process to play out. Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated!
If this is your thinking, move to Mclean
But why though? What was it about what I wrote that makes you say that? I'm at the early end of the learning curve here.
You are asking any questions about gifted, you don’t belong in APS. Learn from our disappointment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in DC and are considering a move to Arlington before my eldest starts 6th next year. I am trying to get a better sense of how children who move into APS in middle school can be identified as gifted. The criteria on the website seem rather vague. In other areas of the country, the criteria are very specific -- i.e., if your child achieves X percentile on Y nationally normed test, the child would be immediately placed in gifted upon starting school. This doesn't seem to be the case for APS -- instead it seems kind of squishy and like my child would be in a general classroom for some time while we waited for this subjective process to play out. Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated!
If this is your thinking, move to Mclean
But why though? What was it about what I wrote that makes you say that? I'm at the early end of the learning curve here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in DC and are considering a move to Arlington before my eldest starts 6th next year. I am trying to get a better sense of how children who move into APS in middle school can be identified as gifted. The criteria on the website seem rather vague. In other areas of the country, the criteria are very specific -- i.e., if your child achieves X percentile on Y nationally normed test, the child would be immediately placed in gifted upon starting school. This doesn't seem to be the case for APS -- instead it seems kind of squishy and like my child would be in a general classroom for some time while we waited for this subjective process to play out. Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated!
If this is your thinking, move to Mclean
But why though? What was it about what I wrote that makes you say that? I'm at the early end of the learning curve here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in DC and are considering a move to Arlington before my eldest starts 6th next year. I am trying to get a better sense of how children who move into APS in middle school can be identified as gifted. The criteria on the website seem rather vague. In other areas of the country, the criteria are very specific -- i.e., if your child achieves X percentile on Y nationally normed test, the child would be immediately placed in gifted upon starting school. This doesn't seem to be the case for APS -- instead it seems kind of squishy and like my child would be in a general classroom for some time while we waited for this subjective process to play out. Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated!
If this is your thinking, move to Mclean
Anonymous wrote:We live in DC and are considering a move to Arlington before my eldest starts 6th next year. I am trying to get a better sense of how children who move into APS in middle school can be identified as gifted. The criteria on the website seem rather vague. In other areas of the country, the criteria are very specific -- i.e., if your child achieves X percentile on Y nationally normed test, the child would be immediately placed in gifted upon starting school. This doesn't seem to be the case for APS -- instead it seems kind of squishy and like my child would be in a general classroom for some time while we waited for this subjective process to play out. Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It makes absolutely no difference at all in APS middle school if you're tagged as gifted. It really only matters for elementary. Your student can still sign up for intensified classes whether or not they're tagged.
The biggest question you'll have to work through with APS is the appropriate math placement, but that is also not decided by the gifted label.
You need to be placed into intensified math though based on scores. There is a cut off and my kid was above the cut off in 6th, but didn’t get in pre algebra because they didn’t have enough teachers.
Anonymous wrote:It makes absolutely no difference at all in APS middle school if you're tagged as gifted. It really only matters for elementary. Your student can still sign up for intensified classes whether or not they're tagged.
The biggest question you'll have to work through with APS is the appropriate math placement, but that is also not decided by the gifted label.