Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor kids deserve an opportunity to develop to their full potential just like more privileged kids, but that’s difficult to do when stuck in a classroom that moves at a snail’s pace. If a bright student has never been exposed to more advanced material, he/she will score lower on achievement tests like the CogAT than similar students from wealthier schools.
Fairfax should implement school-based norms (i.e. top 10% at each school is in-pool) as recommended in the report and develop a local level IV program at every ES, which would address this issue. And yes, parent referrals should be eliminated.
Stupid idea. This is what they did in Texas for equality. I taught at UT Austin and have never had such disparate student abilities in any other school. Literal geniuses on one end of the class and on the other end a poor hispanic kid that honestly shouldn't be in college at all and can barely write a sentence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this called an "Equity" report. Gifted Education is based on the assumption that everyone is not of equal intelligence, equal ability.
Because it is assumed that kids of all races are gifted but some are undiscovered.
Then why do they have to lower standards for some particular races in order to call them gifted or advanced?
The report stated that all races had similar means and ranges for test scores. There was no recommendation to change that.
I don't see your repeated claim about this is true. Using NNAT scores as the example:
Mean scores for all students: Asian=113.6, White=107.5, Black=97.6
Mean scores for Level 4 eligibles: Asian=129, White=118, Black=111
Max scores for Level 4 eligibles: Asian=160, White=160, Black=142
I don't think these can be called "similar".
You forgot to put in the MINIMUM scores for all Level 4 eligible students:
WHITE = 70 (this is the 2nd percentile rank!!!!) , Asian = 93, Black = 85
You forgot to put in the MINIMUM scores for all Level 4 eligible students:
WHITE = 70 (this is the 2nd percentile rank!!!!) , Asian = 93, Black = 85
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor kids deserve an opportunity to develop to their full potential just like more privileged kids, but that’s difficult to do when stuck in a classroom that moves at a snail’s pace. If a bright student has never been exposed to more advanced material, he/she will score lower on achievement tests like the CogAT than similar students from wealthier schools.
Fairfax should implement school-based norms (i.e. top 10% at each school is in-pool) as recommended in the report and develop a local level IV program at every ES, which would address this issue. And yes, parent referrals should be eliminated.
Stupid idea. This is what they did in Texas for equality. I taught at UT Austin and have never had such disparate student abilities in any other school. Literal geniuses on one end of the class and on the other end a poor hispanic kid that honestly shouldn't be in college at all and can barely write a sentence.
To clarify, I don't mean for AAP, I mean top 10% of every high school is admitted to college. Sorry but some high schools should have 0% admitted.
Anonymous wrote:AAP should be identifying kids who need acceleration who aren't getting their needs met in their base school
In Montgomery County they changed the formula for middle school magnet admissions
If you are in a lower income/crappy school the cutoffs are lower but still high where say only 5% of the population is identified
If you are in a higher income/better school almost no one made the program because there is already a high performing cohort at the base school
I actually agree with this thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:There was a lot of double speak. Like, they said it was good that FCPS used multiple factors and not just test scores, but then went on to say that GBRS is not a psychometrically vetted measure and thus is very arbitrary. Since it is the primary measure for finding kids eligible, this is problematic.
They showed that white people take full advantage of parent referrals.
When adjusted for test scores, an AA kid is more than 5 times more likely to be selected than a white or Asian kid with the same stats.
While URMs are still underrepresented, their representation is increasing.
People strongly supported front end services like a robust Young Scholars program to address the achievement gap
The people who created the report want to get rid of NNAT since it doesn't give them any info not already provided by CogAT NV, but it still costs a lot.
They wanted a real, vetted measure used in place of GBRS.
They want to get rid of parent referrals, parental submission of materials into the packet, and substantially reduce appeals, but they also want the in-pool benchmark reduced. The reason for this is that URMs and lower income kids are less likely to take advantage of parent referrals, parent supplied packet materials, and appeals.
They want stronger LI, LII, and LIII
They want full time AARTs at every school, and maybe extra AART support at Title I schools. They found part time AARTs pretty useless.
They also suggested using school-wide norms rather than county wide ones. Like, the top whatever percent of kids in each school would be in AAP.
The lowest kids getting accepted had CogAT scores around 90, which is well below average. The mean scores were around a 119 CogAT V, a 126 Q, and a 124 NV. Mean NNAT was lower than that, I think.
AAP teachers have complained that the range of learners is too broad, and that they will have kids who are below grade level in the same class as kids who get perfect scores on CogAT.
The goals of AAP are unclear on a county wide level.
That's the rough summary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor kids deserve an opportunity to develop to their full potential just like more privileged kids, but that’s difficult to do when stuck in a classroom that moves at a snail’s pace. If a bright student has never been exposed to more advanced material, he/she will score lower on achievement tests like the CogAT than similar students from wealthier schools.
Fairfax should implement school-based norms (i.e. top 10% at each school is in-pool) as recommended in the report and develop a local level IV program at every ES, which would address this issue. And yes, parent referrals should be eliminated.
Stupid idea. This is what they did in Texas for equality. I taught at UT Austin and have never had such disparate student abilities in any other school. Literal geniuses on one end of the class and on the other end a poor hispanic kid that honestly shouldn't be in college at all and can barely write a sentence.
Anonymous wrote:AAP should be identifying kids who need acceleration who aren't getting their needs met in their base school
In Montgomery County they changed the formula for middle school magnet admissions
If you are in a lower income/crappy school the cutoffs are lower but still high where say only 5% of the population is identified
If you are in a higher income/better school almost no one made the program because there is already a high performing cohort at the base school
I actually agree with this thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor kids deserve an opportunity to develop to their full potential just like more privileged kids, but that’s difficult to do when stuck in a classroom that moves at a snail’s pace. If a bright student has never been exposed to more advanced material, he/she will score lower on achievement tests like the CogAT than similar students from wealthier schools.
Fairfax should implement school-based norms (i.e. top 10% at each school is in-pool) as recommended in the report and develop a local level IV program at every ES, which would address this issue. And yes, parent referrals should be eliminated.
Stupid idea. This is what they did in Texas for equality. I taught at UT Austin and have never had such disparate student abilities in any other school. Literal geniuses on one end of the class and on the other end a poor hispanic kid that honestly shouldn't be in college at all and can barely write a sentence.
Anonymous wrote:Poor kids deserve an opportunity to develop to their full potential just like more privileged kids, but that’s difficult to do when stuck in a classroom that moves at a snail’s pace. If a bright student has never been exposed to more advanced material, he/she will score lower on achievement tests like the CogAT than similar students from wealthier schools.
Fairfax should implement school-based norms (i.e. top 10% at each school is in-pool) as recommended in the report and develop a local level IV program at every ES, which would address this issue. And yes, parent referrals should be eliminated.