Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30% of FCPS students are in AAP. It’s not a selective group by any means. Acceptance is not based on scores, but mainly hinders on excellent teacher recommendations. If you have a gifted child who is disruptive in class, this child will not get a good letter and will not get into AAP. It’s a teachers pet sort of thing.
This is all wrong. All of it.
Anonymous wrote:30% of FCPS students are in AAP. It’s not a selective group by any means. Acceptance is not based on scores, but mainly hinders on excellent teacher recommendations. If you have a gifted child who is disruptive in class, this child will not get a good letter and will not get into AAP. It’s a teachers pet sort of thing.
Anonymous wrote:I have work samples from home, but do we need recommendation letters from other teachers, or coaches and how far do they matter?
Anonymous wrote:Don't bother with the above two responses. They are trolls looking to incite--best to ignore.
If you're actually asking the question, 140 composite is a great score and it isn't "automatically" thrown out because someone thinks the child was prepped. Many kids who are prepped fail to score 120 because young minds don't always grasp how to respond to a question when the question is slightly altered. (Unless you browbeat the child, which I don't think any parent or prepping class will do!) So, given that, I'd just make sure that you have a few samples of his work available for your child's AART to use in the package, especially if you're new to FCPS and they do not have enough credible samples of his work. I also think that for the AARTs will really start to focus on the kids who are in the pool in the next several weeks (the package isn't due to central until February) to gather sufficient classwork samples. At least that is what the AART in our school did for my older child once they understood who is in the pool.