Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.
The nomenclature is largely a fig leaf to maintain the fiction that the AAP center at Jackson will be vibrant after FCPS redistricted many of the higher-income neighborhoods zoned for Jackson to Thoreau. Most expect the LLIV program at Thoreau to grow in size and prestige, which is exactly what you’d expect when you move wealthier students to one school and concentrate poverty at another.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.
OP here. I'm aware of this. Older DC went to LJ. We decided on TMS for DC2. At the open house/info. session they clearly told us that AAP classes were quite different from Honors classes hence the question on the actual form.
I wouldn't say it was "quite clearly" as other than the mumbo jumbo about breadth and depth, there wasn't a whole lot said.
Oh well! Too late anyways. Everyone from DC's AAP class is going to TMS so did not them to be the only kid to go to LJ and come back to a school (madison) where they didn't know anyone. So TMS, it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.
OP here. I'm aware of this. Older DC went to LJ. We decided on TMS for DC2. At the open house/info. session they clearly told us that AAP classes were quite different from Honors classes hence the question on the actual form.
I wouldn't say it was "quite clearly" as other than the mumbo jumbo about breadth and depth, there wasn't a whole lot said.
Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.
OP here. I'm aware of this. Older DC went to LJ. We decided on TMS for DC2. At the open house/info. session they clearly told us that AAP classes were quite different from Honors classes hence the question on the actual form.
Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.
Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.
Anonymous wrote:Thoreau is not an AAP Center like Jackson or Kilmer so the core courses at Thoreau are not "AAP" in any official sense. I understand that Thoreau groups Level IV-eligible students together in some classes, but it still is not an AAP Center, which may explain some of the ambiguity in the forms. AAP students with Thoreau as their base school have the option to attend the well-established AAP Center at Jackson if they are looking for strong AAP instruction in their core courses, as well as a large AAP peer group.