Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:are they still willing to support those in-pool students to move to the center? Or do they try to keep "good" students in the local school?
What's a "good" student?
Anonymous wrote:I think the OP's question misunderstands the local school's role in the selection process.
If your local school has Level IV AAP, the school will be motivated to make sure enough of their own students get in to AAP (so that they can fill their class, and also tout the strength of their own AAP program so that they can "compete" with the Center school).
This means they will be highly motivated to produce high quality files that are sent off to the County for AAP selection process.
When the local school sends these packets off, they have no idea which students (if selected) will choose the local school, and which will choose the Center school. So there really is no way for them to game the system.
Once the AAP selections are made, it is completely 100% up to the parent to decide whether the child will attend the Center or the Local program. The local school has no power over that decision (other than the power of persuasion).
At that point, it is really irrelevant whether the local school "supports" the child going to the center or not. The decision is up to the parent.
Anonymous wrote:Our base school has a LLIV program. Many kids qualify for level IV and unfortunately many of those race to the center even though the base program is a good one with at least one excellent teacher out of four. I would say two more are quite good and the fourth is fine, from what I have heard. I don't understand how people can think that schools would try to "keep their kids" by lowering their GBRS or by not giving good work samples.
The process is subjective, but there is no way schools would purposely do it so that kids don't qualify and have to stay at their base school. I highly doubt any of our kids are so special that our schools identify them as keeper and want to prevent them from qualifying.
Anonymous wrote:My LLIV school supports it students. We kept my child there, but if we'd elected to send him to the center, I wouldn't expect any "support" from the LLIV school from 3rd grade onward, because he'd no longer be one of their students.
Anonymous wrote:No, our local level iv sold itself and approximately 1/4 of the kids went to the Center, 3/4 stayed. It is an extremely robust local level iv class with no principal designees.

Anonymous wrote:are they still willing to support those in-pool students to move to the center? Or do they try to keep "good" students in the local school?
Anonymous wrote:Our base school now has a LLIV program, but did not when my DC#1 went into AAP. They were extremely supportive for DC#1 to go to the center. When DC#2 was found eligible, however, they had started LLIV. The base school was less supportive of DC#2 going to the center because they wanted to keep DC#2 there. I really felt like I was no longer welcome after I decided DC was not going there - even thought the main reason was so that both of my children were in the same school.