Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi all,
My son goes to private school currently and is in 2nd grade
We applied for aap and got rejected with NNAT - 160(99%) and cogat-139 composite score. They said they don’t care much about GBRS from private school teachers, he got 15.
We had taken wisc V with private doc and he got FSIQ 138 and appealed with this score
Today we got an email saying he is not eligible
I went through the forum and also met many FCPS parents, everyone is puzzled with this decision
Has anyone gone through similar experience
Please share
Thanks
Hi any update from AAP center on your case. I am also in same situation my daughter is in private school with very strong application and higher test scores, but got rejected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that this is likely, but space limitations and filling out a cohort would affect kids who are borderline - not kids who have really high test scores and ought to be shoo-ins. Either way, I doubt that anyone from the central committee would directly admit that the specific school matters, or that there are any space limitations to the program.Anonymous wrote:This is why FCPS central committee will have to consider which school your child goes to when they determine an eligibility for AAP even if they don't or can't say it.
THIS! The only thing I can think is that they are biased against private school kids. Like, hey, FCPS wasn't good enough for you for K-2 so don't come begging to use our AAP program now. But OP and PP both said other kids from their schools with lower scores are getting in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that this is likely, but space limitations and filling out a cohort would affect kids who are borderline - not kids who have really high test scores and ought to be shoo-ins. Either way, I doubt that anyone from the central committee would directly admit that the specific school matters, or that there are any space limitations to the program.Anonymous wrote:This is why FCPS central committee will have to consider which school your child goes to when they determine an eligibility for AAP even if they don't or can't say it.
Whats the borderline scores that could be affected? Would it be something like 128-132? What about kids with scores a little over 132?
Anonymous wrote:Hi all,
My son goes to private school currently and is in 2nd grade
We applied for aap and got rejected with NNAT - 160(99%) and cogat-139 composite score. They said they don’t care much about GBRS from private school teachers, he got 15.
We had taken wisc V with private doc and he got FSIQ 138 and appealed with this score
Today we got an email saying he is not eligible
I went through the forum and also met many FCPS parents, everyone is puzzled with this decision
Has anyone gone through similar experience
Please share
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:
Whats the borderline scores that could be affected? Would it be something like 128-132? What about kids with scores a little over 132?
Anonymous wrote:Please try reaching Ms. Laura or Oscar at this email ID: lOFCalagua@fcps.edu
Anonymous wrote:I agree that this is likely, but space limitations and filling out a cohort would affect kids who are borderline - not kids who have really high test scores and ought to be shoo-ins. Either way, I doubt that anyone from the central committee would directly admit that the specific school matters, or that there are any space limitations to the program.Anonymous wrote:This is why FCPS central committee will have to consider which school your child goes to when they determine an eligibility for AAP even if they don't or can't say it.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that this is likely, but space limitations and filling out a cohort would affect kids who are borderline - not kids who have really high test scores and ought to be shoo-ins. Either way, I doubt that anyone from the central committee would directly admit that the specific school matters, or that there are any space limitations to the program.Anonymous wrote:This is why FCPS central committee will have to consider which school your child goes to when they determine an eligibility for AAP even if they don't or can't say it.
I agree that this is likely, but space limitations and filling out a cohort would affect kids who are borderline - not kids who have really high test scores and ought to be shoo-ins. Either way, I doubt that anyone from the central committee would directly admit that the specific school matters, or that there are any space limitations to the program.Anonymous wrote:This is why FCPS central committee will have to consider which school your child goes to when they determine an eligibility for AAP even if they don't or can't say it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. We are in the same boat as OP. My DD received 99 percentile on Nnat, 99 percentile on COGAT and 99 percentile on WISC. Grbs of 15. We showed well rounded athletic abilities as she is involved on multiple sports, piano etc.. creative writing, language and math samples. We also applied from private school. I called my local aap and was told they dont know what happened, they dont make decisions.
OP what is your AAP school?
Other kids got in with lower scores from my school. My school administator called the main ASP administrator and was told scores and selections are based on which ES you are applying to. Some schools are very over crowded. They listed my school as being one of the ones they are cutting slots on this year along with a few others.
There is no cap on the number of kids accepted to AAP.
Sports have no correlation to bitterness and have no bearing on an AAP application.
+1, If school has more AAP kids they will open new class.
The problem is finding teachers for AAP classes. You can't put most of the teachers in Gen ed in AAP classes without training and that can't happen overnight. Many teachers are not interested in teaching AAP classes because of the commitment to get certified for the next several years. To keep existing teachers hired in their school, they want to ensure the balance between Gen ed and AAP classes and not too many AAP classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: My school administator called the main ASP administrator and was told scores and selections are based on which ES you are applying to. Some schools are very over crowded. They listed my school as being one of the ones they are cutting slots on this year along with a few others.
Someone at the main AAP office specifically told your school administrator that there were limited AAP slots available?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: My school administator called the main ASP administrator and was told scores and selections are based on which ES you are applying to. Some schools are very over crowded. They listed my school as being one of the ones they are cutting slots on this year along with a few others.
Someone at the main AAP office specifically told your school administrator that there were limited AAP slots available?!