Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. A kid who is a solid student with a high GBRS and a 120-ish IQ would be very average within AAP, and the kid would fit perfectly into the program. No, the DD doesn’t “need AAP,” but she’s no different than the majority of bright kids who get in.
I think it’s a reasonable question to ask to focus OPs appeal. Make the case for why your DD “needs aap.” It’s not the WISC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. A kid who is a solid student with a high GBRS and a 120-ish IQ would be very average within AAP, and the kid would fit perfectly into the program. No, the DD doesn’t “need AAP,” but she’s no different than the majority of bright kids who get in.
I think it’s a reasonable question to ask to focus OPs appeal. Make the case for why your DD “needs aap.” It’s not the WISC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD was rejected earlier this week. She was in pool, but barely. NNAT 118. Cogat -- 122 verbal, 135 Q, 122 nonverbal, 131 VQN. GBRS 3C, 1F with very good commentary.
I scheduled the WISC for mid March to avoid the April rush (given that she was barely in pool, I knew there was a decent chance she would not get in). Overall, the WISC score is lower than the cogat, but the verbal score is higher than her cogat verbal score. FSIQ 122 (verbal comprehension 127, visual spatial 114, fluid reasoning 109, working memory 120, processing speed 116).
My gut is that we shouldn't include this WISC in our appeal, but I was wondering if others have successfully used a generally lower WISC where one of the sub scores was higher than the cogat.
We did not submit work samples or the parent questionnaire with the initial application and plan to that with the appeal.
Thanks in advance for the help!
Why do you think DD needs AAP?
Anonymous wrote:DP. A kid who is a solid student with a high GBRS and a 120-ish IQ would be very average within AAP, and the kid would fit perfectly into the program. No, the DD doesn’t “need AAP,” but she’s no different than the majority of bright kids who get in.
Anonymous wrote:DD was rejected earlier this week. She was in pool, but barely. NNAT 118. Cogat -- 122 verbal, 135 Q, 122 nonverbal, 131 VQN. GBRS 3C, 1F with very good commentary.
I scheduled the WISC for mid March to avoid the April rush (given that she was barely in pool, I knew there was a decent chance she would not get in). Overall, the WISC score is lower than the cogat, but the verbal score is higher than her cogat verbal score. FSIQ 122 (verbal comprehension 127, visual spatial 114, fluid reasoning 109, working memory 120, processing speed 116).
My gut is that we shouldn't include this WISC in our appeal, but I was wondering if others have successfully used a generally lower WISC where one of the sub scores was higher than the cogat.
We did not submit work samples or the parent questionnaire with the initial application and plan to that with the appeal.
Thanks in advance for the help!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with PP--don't submit the WISC. Focus on addressing deficiencies through the work samples and parent questionnaire. Your test scores are high enough as is if accompanied by good supporting materials.
Meant to say that I agree with the poster at 17:48. If you peruse the acceptance thread there are a number of admits with lower verbal scores than 122. You need a good writing sample though.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with PP--don't submit the WISC. Focus on addressing deficiencies through the work samples and parent questionnaire. Your test scores are high enough as is if accompanied by good supporting materials.
Anonymous wrote:DD was rejected earlier this week. She was in pool, but barely. NNAT 118. Cogat -- 122 verbal, 135 Q, 122 nonverbal, 131 VQN. GBRS 3C, 1F with very good commentary.
I scheduled the WISC for mid March to avoid the April rush (given that she was barely in pool, I knew there was a decent chance she would not get in). Overall, the WISC score is lower than the cogat, but the verbal score is higher than her cogat verbal score. FSIQ 122 (verbal comprehension 127, visual spatial 114, fluid reasoning 109, working memory 120, processing speed 116).
My gut is that we shouldn't include this WISC in our appeal, but I was wondering if others have successfully used a generally lower WISC where one of the sub scores was higher than the cogat.
We did not submit work samples or the parent questionnaire with the initial application and plan to that with the appeal.
Thanks in advance for the help!