Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither of my kids have ever said they were the smartest in a class nor would I ever want them to say that. They had very high GBRS (15 and a 16), high cogats (140) and very high wiscs (145+). I'd wonder why your kids are saying that. Sounds awful coming from anyone, let alone a kid!!
Yes, it does. I don't want to hear him say that. Which is why I want AAP for my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is in the pool for AAP based on his CoGat score. However, if he does get admitted into AAP I am not sure if I want him to be in the program. He is finally enjoying school in 2nd grade (he had behavior issues in K and 1 due to immaturity and I suspect possibly boredom) and I don't want to overwhelm him with work in 3rd grade. Why did you choose to have your kid in AAP or choose not to? The school he is in is a AAP base school so he wouldn't switch schools either way. The school is also a 10 on great schools, so the base population is already pretty high achieving.
AAP classes are usually smaller in size and have better resources (teacher /student ratio). Beside you always have to option to pull him back, while if he doesn't make it to AAP, he has no option but to stay.
Anonymous wrote:Neither of my kids have ever said they were the smartest in a class nor would I ever want them to say that. They had very high GBRS (15 and a 16), high cogats (140) and very high wiscs (145+). I'd wonder why your kids are saying that. Sounds awful coming from anyone, let alone a kid!!
Anonymous wrote:My child is in the pool for AAP based on his CoGat score. However, if he does get admitted into AAP I am not sure if I want him to be in the program. He is finally enjoying school in 2nd grade (he had behavior issues in K and 1 due to immaturity and I suspect possibly boredom) and I don't want to overwhelm him with work in 3rd grade. Why did you choose to have your kid in AAP or choose not to? The school he is in is a AAP base school so he wouldn't switch schools either way. The school is also a 10 on great schools, so the base population is already pretty high achieving.
Anonymous wrote:My son told me that he is the smartest kid in his class. I told him he may be one of the smartest kids in his class, but he needs to work hard.
I want him to be in a class where he is not the smartest kid in his class, and where he has hard work to work on.
Anonymous wrote:My child is in the pool for AAP based on his CoGat score. However, if he does get admitted into AAP I am not sure if I want him to be in the program. He is finally enjoying school in 2nd grade (he had behavior issues in K and 1 due to immaturity and I suspect possibly boredom) and I don't want to overwhelm him with work in 3rd grade. Why did you choose to have your kid in AAP or choose not to? The school he is in is a AAP base school so he wouldn't switch schools either way. The school is also a 10 on great schools, so the base population is already pretty high achieving.