Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A teacher stopped me in the hall and asked to speak to me. This is a teacher who sees all the kids at some point each week (specials teacher). She said she hopes I was applying for aap for one kid because he belonged in aap because of the connections he makes and questions he asks and then she gave me examples of what he says from a paper she had on her desk. This was my younger child. What’s funny is my older kid got a 16 gbrs and this one got a 15. Both got in. Both second grade teachers said the kids would be good candidates for aap. FWIW friends noted the teacher’s were more neutral when they asked if their kids would be good fits
Sure. Your kids are the most special snowflakes to grace an AAP classroom. Regular people, however, shouldn't bother asking the teacher, since they will get a very neutral response.
Anonymous wrote:A teacher stopped me in the hall and asked to speak to me. This is a teacher who sees all the kids at some point each week (specials teacher). She said she hopes I was applying for aap for one kid because he belonged in aap because of the connections he makes and questions he asks and then she gave me examples of what he says from a paper she had on her desk. This was my younger child. What’s funny is my older kid got a 16 gbrs and this one got a 15. Both got in. Both second grade teachers said the kids would be good candidates for aap. FWIW friends noted the teacher’s were more neutral when they asked if their kids would be good fits
Sure. Your kids are the most special snowflakes to grace an AAP classroom. Regular people, however, shouldn't bother asking the teacher, since they will get a very neutral response. Anonymous wrote:I’m planning to ask the teacher at November conferences. She’s an experienced teacher and I think she will give it to me straight.
Anonymous wrote:Also- even if the scores are “in-pool”, send in the parent referral form and include work samples. You never know what the school will send in the package for the work samples, and some teachers are better than others at procuring good samples from the class. Include a strong example of writing.
Anonymous wrote:We were told to refer before we get any test scores back, as they may come back after the deadline. How did you know whether level IV would be the right fit for your child and you wanted to parent refer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol, I'm a teacher. First rule of being a teacher--never tell parents news they don't want to hear. I once told a parent I didn't think their child should stay in honors math next year, and she took my name to the school principal, regional sup, and school board member and trashed me as "destroying her child's confidence and love of learning." I had to go to so many meetings to try to clear my name. Lesson learned. Now all answers are vague and useless to protect myself.
Just refer if you want to. No teacher is going to tell you not to.
This. Most teachers are very vague about it.
Anonymous wrote:lol, I'm a teacher. First rule of being a teacher--never tell parents news they don't want to hear. I once told a parent I didn't think their child should stay in honors math next year, and she took my name to the school principal, regional sup, and school board member and trashed me as "destroying her child's confidence and love of learning." I had to go to so many meetings to try to clear my name. Lesson learned. Now all answers are vague and useless to protect myself.
Just refer if you want to. No teacher is going to tell you not to.
Anonymous wrote:First, talk to the teacher.