Anonymous wrote:NP - my kid started in the magnet program a few years ago. Have to say that it's been good overall.. but expect to supplement the materials outside of school / at home / via third-party programs if you want to keep your kid on par. The program just isn't designed to accelerate on an individual basis - it's seems to be designed to repeat and reinforce. My kid actually lost ground the first two years of the program before we started supplementing - and the school is still about a full year behind the supplemental materials I provide. If you're okay with that, then not an issue. However, I've heard it gets more 'pressure cooker' down the road, so a parent at 6th grade+ should probably comment about that.
Anonymous wrote:NP - my kid started in the magnet program a few years ago. Have to say that it's been good overall.. but expect to supplement the materials outside of school / at home / via third-party programs if you want to keep your kid on par. The program just isn't designed to accelerate on an individual basis - it's seems to be designed to repeat and reinforce. My kid actually lost ground the first two years of the program before we started supplementing - and the school is still about a full year behind the supplemental materials I provide. If you're okay with that, then not an issue. However, I've heard it gets more 'pressure cooker' down the road, so a parent at 6th grade+ should probably comment about that.
Anonymous wrote:All of the only applies to mcps...other counties do it differently
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there GT-type programs in the home schools for kids who are not accepted to the centers, or who choose not to go?
Not at our home school. We are at an HGC, but the kids who got waitlisted do not have a GT option at the home school.
However, this year, MCPS offered a different GT program at three elementary schools where one entire class was considered ‘GT’.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there GT-type programs in the home schools for kids who are not accepted to the centers, or who choose not to go?
NOT ANY MORE! Common core Curriculum 2.0 annihilated that and any teacher's ability to teach beyond the state mandated curriculum.
MCPS only serves a tiny fraction of its gifted students, it's focus is on ESOL and bottom performers. Read the mission statement and keep paying your property taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Are there GT-type programs in the home schools for kids who are not accepted to the centers, or who choose not to go?
Anonymous wrote:All of this is in flux, OP. Nominally, county-wide GT programs start in 3rd grade based on testing that happens in 2nd. However, there is no real differentiation or acceleration in 3rd. So your kid may get the GT label but no services.
THEN, in 3rd grade they take a test for placement for 4th and 5th grades. Ostensibly the top 3-5% of kids will attend centers for enriched studies, where they are in contained classrooms with other gifted kids. In practice....they have made the process less clear in the past year and no one really knows what scores will qualify a child, or what is considered.
THEN, there are tests for magnet middle schools and magnet high schools.
Anonymous wrote:Are there GT-type programs in the home schools for kids who are not accepted to the centers, or who choose not to go?