Anonymous wrote:Why not just create TAG centers for middle school?
Anonymous wrote:There are TAG centers but many of them only have 1 or 2 classrooms of TAG students just like some of the elementary TAG centers. For example, Kenmoor Middle School is a TAG center but there is only 1 TAG class per grade. Greenbelt Middle School is also a TAG Center but it also houses non-TAG classrooms. It would be fantastic if they would convert an entire middle school to a TAG center but I think that would take a lot more momentum than just opening extra classes in the existing centers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are TAG centers but many of them only have 1 or 2 classrooms of TAG students just like some of the elementary TAG centers. For example, Kenmoor Middle School is a TAG center but there is only 1 TAG class per grade. Greenbelt Middle School is also a TAG Center but it also houses non-TAG classrooms. It would be fantastic if they would convert an entire middle school to a TAG center but I think that would take a lot more momentum than just opening extra classes in the existing centers.
I'm actually opposed to this. There are kids that are high achieving in one subject, but don't test into TAG and would benefit from
Being able to take higher level math classes with s cohort of other high achieving middle schoolers. The transportation costs (and time) of a regional TAG only center would be enormous. I don't see what's terrible about a kid being in a school that has both TAG magnet and would necessitate this.
Anonymous wrote:There are TAG centers but many of them only have 1 or 2 classrooms of TAG students just like some of the elementary TAG centers. For example, Kenmoor Middle School is a TAG center but there is only 1 TAG class per grade. Greenbelt Middle School is also a TAG Center but it also houses non-TAG classrooms. It would be fantastic if they would convert an entire middle school to a TAG center but I think that would take a lot more momentum than just opening extra classes in the existing centers.