The teachers still call it GT.
Anonymous wrote:I'm very glad they changed the name to focus on the service - now if I could just get my rising 6th grader to call it AAP rather than the G/T as she's known it to be since 3rd grade...hopefully her younger sib will know it only as AAP.
Surely your 6th grader is academically advanced enough to get a handle on the name change.
I'm very glad they changed the name to focus on the service - now if I could just get my rising 6th grader to call it AAP rather than the G/T as she's known it to be since 3rd grade...hopefully her younger sib will know it only as AAP.
The coordinator mentioned that some parents were not able to understand while their musically or athletically "gifted" child was not admitted to the program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The program name has changed from GT to AAP. Not sure why.
http://www.fcps.edu/DIS/gt/pdfs/gtac/GTAC%202006-07%20Annual%20Report.pdf
During the course of the GTAC discussions this year, the question was raised about the name of the program itself. We know that the State of Virginia requires Fairfax County Public Schools to provide gifted services, but it does not designate the name of those services. Several choices were discussed and, while some members did not support a change, the majority of the Committee membership approved of a name change from Gifted and Talented Services to Advanced Academic Programs. It was felt by the Committee that this name change emphasizes efforts to put a label on the service being offered and recognizes the academic nature of the program.
Anonymous wrote:
The program name has changed from GT to AAP. Not sure why.
having just read the FCPS website on AAP I think you are right - it is for gifted and talented and academically advanced students.
Thanks for all the great information here..my anxiety started when my kid came back and told he that the kindergarten teacher picked his friends for advanced reading and not him, and when we knew his reading was almost at 1.5-2nd grade level..
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for all the great information here..my anxiety started when my kid came back and told he that the kindergarten teacher picked his friends for advanced reading and not him, and when we knew his reading was almost at 1.5-2nd grade level..
We tried to work with the teacher to get some more appropriate stuff for him to do in school ( we can pretty much take his studies at home..so dont need the teacher to help him there)..but she kept insisting his is at grade level and went on to even say that we are over-estimating his abilities..
that's what triggered us this summer to get him tested.
We dont come from a great school district and I am desperate to get him into GT so that he has good peer's